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A33880 The history of the damnable popish plot, in its various branches and progress published for the satisfaction of the present and future ages / by the authors of The weekly pacquet of advice from Rome. Care, Henry, 1646-1688.; Robinson, 17th cent. 1680 (1680) Wing C522; ESTC R10752 197,441 406

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of Winchester Henry Lord Marquess of Worcester Henry Earl of Arlington Lord Chamberlain of the Houshold James Earl of Salisbury John Earl of Bridgewater Robert Earl of Sunderland one of his Majesties principal Secretaries of State lately made in the room of Sir Joseph Williamson Arthur Earl of Essex first Lord Commissioner of the Treasury John Earl of Bath Groom of the Stole Thomas Lord Viscount Faulconberg George Lord Viscount Hallifax Henry Lord Bishop of London John Lord Roberts Denzil Lord Holles William Lord Russel William Lord Cavendish Henry Coventry Esq one of his Majesties principle Secretaries of State Sir Francis North Kt. Lord Cheif Justice of the Common-Pleas Sir Henry Capel Kt. of the Bath first Commissioner of the Admiralty Sir John Earnley Kt. Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir Thomas Chicheley Kt. Master of the Ordnance Sir William Temple Baronet Edward Seymour Esq Henry Powle Esq The 30th of April His Majesty made a Speech to both Houses of Parliament wherein he recommended three things to them The prosecution of the Plot The disbanding of the Army and the providing a Fleet which was followed by a larger signification of his Majesties mind by the Lord Chancellor That His Majesty had considered with himself That 't is not enough that his Peoples Religion and Liberty be secure during his own Reign but thinks he ows it to his People to do all that in him lies that these Blessings may be transmitted to Posterity And to the end that it may never be in the power of any Papist if the Crown descend upon him to make any change in Church or State his Majesty would consent to limit such Successor in these points 1. That no such Popish Successor shall present to Ecclesiastical Benefices 2. That during the Reign of such Popish Successor no Privy Councellors or Judges Lord Leiutenant or Deputy Leiutenant or Officer of the Navy shall be put in or removed but by Authority of Parliament 3. That as it is already provided That no Papist can sit in either House of Parliament so there shall never want a Parliament when the King shall happen to die but that the Parliament then in Being may continue Indissoluble for a competent time or the last Parliament Re-assemble c. But it seems all these Provisions were not thought a sufficient Fence for such dear and precious things as Religion and Liberty and that in the progress of their Debates upon this most important Subject they could not resolve upon any certain Expedient of safety less than the Exclusion of his Royal Higness For on Sunday April the 27th 1679. It was Resolved by the House of Commons Nemine Contradicente That the Duke of York being a Papist and the hopes of his coming such to the Crown hath given the greatest Encouragement and Countenance to the present Conspiracies and Designs of the Papists against the King and Protestant Religion And on Sunday May the 11th the better Day the better Deed we use to say but whether it will hold here will be the Question they Ordered That a Bill should be brought in to disable the Duke of York to Inherit the Imperial Crown of this Realm which was brought in accordingly and twice read in the House the preamble thereof being to this effect That forasmuch as these Kingdoms of England and Ireland by the wonderful Providence of God many Years since have been delivered from the Slavery and Superstition of Popery which had despoiled the King of his Sovereign Power for that it did and doth advance the Pope of Rome to a Power over Sovereign Princes and makes him Monarch of the Universe and doth with-draw the Subjects from their Allegiance by pretended Absolutions from all former Daths and Obligations to their lawful Sovereign and by many Superstitions and Immoralities hath quite subverted the Ends of the Christian Religion But notwithstanding That Popery hath been long since Condemned by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm for the detestable Doctrine and Traiterous Attempts of its Adherents against the Lives of their lawful Sovereigns Kings and Queens of these Realms Yet the Emissaries Priests and Agents for the Pope of Rome resorting into this Kingdom of England in great numbers contrary to the known Laws thereof have for several Years last past as well by their own Devilish Acts and Policies as by Counsel and Assistance of Foreign Princes and Prelates known Enemies to these Nations contrived and carried on a most Horrid and Execrable Conspiracy To destroy and Murther the Person of his Sacred Majesty and to Subvert the ancient Government of these Realms and to Extirpate the Protestant Religion and Massacre the true Professors thereof And for the better effecting their wicked Designs and encouraging their Uilainous Accomplices they have Traterously Seduced James Duke of York Presumptive Heir of these Crowns to the Communion of the Church of Rome and have induced him to Enter into several Negotiations with the Pope his Cardinals and Nuntio's for promoting the Romish Church and Interest and by his means and procurement have advanced the Power and Greatness of the French King to the manifest hazard of these Kingdoms That by the descent of these Crowns upon a Papist and by Foreign Alliances and Assistance they may be able to succeed in their Wicked and Uillainons Designs And forasmuch as the Parliaments of England according to the Laws and Statutes thereof have heretofore for great and weighty Reasons of State and for the publick Good and common Interest at this Kingdom directed and limited the Succession of the Crown in other manner than of Course it would otherwise have gone but never had such important and urgent Reasons as at this Time press and require their using of their said Extraordinary Power in that behalf Be it therefore Enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty by and with the Advice and Consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this Parliament Assembled and by the Authority of the same And it is hereby Enacted accordingly That James Duke of York Albany and Ulster having departed openly from the Church of England and having publickly professed and owned the Popish Religion which hath notoriously given Birth and Life to the most Damnable and Hellish Plot by the most gracious Providence of God lately brought to light shall be Excluded and is hereby Excluded and Disabled c. On the 19th of May the House of Commons attended his Majesty with this following Address Most Dread Sovereign WEE your Majesties most Dutiful and Loyal Subjects the Commons in Parliament Assembled do with all humble gratitude acknowledge the most gratious assurances your Majesty hath been pleased to give us of your constant Care to do every thing that may preserve the Protestant Religion of your firm resolution to defend the same to the utmost and your Royal endeavours that the security of that blessing may be transmitted to posterity And we do humbly represent to your Majesty That being deeply sensible that the
Assemblies and Consultations wherein it was Contrived and Designed amongst them what means should be used and what Persons and Instruments should be employed to Murther his Majesty and did then and there resolve to effect it by Poisoning Shooting Stabing or some such like ways or means and offered Rewards and promises of Advantage to several Persons to Execute the same and hired and employed several Wicked Persons to go to Windsor and other places where his Majesty did reside to Murther and destroy his Majesty which said Persons or some of them accepted some Rewards and undertook the Perpetrating thereof and did actually go to the said places for that end and purpose That the said Conspirators the better to compass their Traiterous Designs have consulted to Raise and have procured and raised Men Money Horses Arms and Ammunition and also have made Application to and Treated and Corresponded with the Pope his Cardinals Nuncio's and Agents and with other Foraign Ministers and Persons to raise Tumults within this Kingdom and to Invade the same with Foraign Forces and to surprize seize and destroy his Majesties Navy Forts Magazines and places of Strength within this Kingdom Whereupon the Calamities of War Murthers of innocent Subjects Men Women and Children Burnings Rapines Devastations and other Dreadful Miseries and Mischiefs must inevitably have ensued to the Ruin and Destruction of this Nation That the said Conspirators have procured accepted and delivered out several Instruments Commissions and Powers made and granted by or under the Pope or other unlawful and usurping Authority to raise and dispose of Men Money Arms and other things necessary for their wicked and Traiterous Designs and namely a Commission to the said Henry Lord Arundel of Warder to be Lord High Chancellor of England and to the said William Earl of Powis to be Lord Treasurer of England another Commission to the said John Lord Bellasis to be General of the Army to be raised and the said William Lord Petre to be Lieutenant General of the said Army and a Power to the said William Viscount Stafford to be Paymaster of the Army That in order to encourage themselves in prosecuting their said wicked Plots Conspiracies and Treasons and to hide and hinder the discovery of the same and to secure themselves from Justice and Punishment the Conspirators aforesaid and Confederates have used many wicked and Diabolical Practices viz. They did cause their Priests to Administer to the said Conspirators an Oath of Secrecy together with their Sacrament and also did cause their said Priests upon Confession to give their Absolutions upon condition that they should conceal the said Conspiracy And when about the Month of September last Sir Edmundbury Godfrey a Justice of Peace had according to the Duty of his Oath and Office taken several Examinations and Informations concerning the said Conspiracy and Plot the said Conspirators or some of them by Advice Assistance Councel and Instigation of the rest did incite and procure divers Persons to lie in wait and persue the said Sir Edmundbury Godfrey several days with intent to Murther him which at last was perpetrated and effected by them for which said horrid Crimes and Offences Robert Green Henry Berry and Lawrence Hill have since been Attainted and Dominick Kelly and Gerald are fled for the same After which Murther and before the Body was found or the Murther known to any but Complices therein the said Persons falsely gave out That he was alive and privately Married and after the Body was found dispersed a false and malicious Report that he had Murthered himself Which said Murther was Committed with design to stifle and suppress the Evidence he had taken and had knowledg of and to discourage and deter Magistrates and others from acting in the further discovery of the said Plot and Conspiracy for which end also the said Sir Edmundbury Godfrey while he was alive was by them their Complices and Favourites threatned and discouraged in his Proceedings about the same And of their further Malice they have wickedly contrived by many false Suggestions to lay the imputation and guilt of the aforesaid horrid and detestable Crimes upon the Protestants that so thereby they might escape the Punishments they have justly deserved and expose Protestants to great Scandal and subject them to Persecution and Oppression in all Kingdoms and Countries where the Roman Religion is received and professed All which Treasons Crimes and Offences above mentioned were Contrived Committed Perpetrated Acted and done by the said William Earl of Powis William Lord Viscount Stafford Henry Lord Arundel of Warder William Lord Petre and John Lord Bellasis every of them and others the Conspirators aforesaid against our Soveraign Lord the King his Crown and Dignity and against the Laws and Statutes of this Kingdom Of all which Treasons Crimes and Offences the Knights Citizens and Burgesses in Parliament Assembled do in the name of themselves and of the Commons of England Impeach the said William Earl of Powis William Viscount Stafford Henry Lord Arundel of Warder William Lord Petre and John Lord Bellasis and every of them And the said Commons by Protestation saving to themselves that liberty of exhibiting at any time hereafter any other Accusations or Impeachments against the said William Earl of Powis William Viscount Stafford Henry Lord Arundel of Warder William Lord Petre and John Lord Bellasis and every of them and also of replying to the Answers which they and every of them make to the Premises or any of them or to any other Accusation or Impeachment which shall be by them exhibited as the Cause according to course and proceedings of Parliament shall require do pray that the said William Earl of Powis William Viscount Stafford Henry Lord Arundel of Warder William Lord Petre and John Lord Bellasis and every of them may be put to Answer all and every of the Premises and that such Proceedings Examinations Tryals and Judgments may be upon them and every of them had and used as shall be agreeable to Law and Justice and Course of Parliament To these Articles of Impeachment the said Lords soon after put in their several Answers as follows The several Answers of William Lord Petre now Prisoner in the Tower to the Articles of Impeachment of High Treason and other Crimes and Offences exhibited to the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled Whereas the Lord above named stands Impeached by the Knights Citizens and Burgesses in Parliament Assembled in the name of themselves and all the Commons in England THE said Lord in the first place and above all other protesting his Innocency The said Lord doth with all humility submit himself desiring above all things the Tryal of his Cause by this Honourable House so that he may be provided to make his just Defence for clearing of his Innocency from the great and hainous Crimes charged against him by the said Impeachment this being prayed as also liberty to correct amend and explain any thing in the
print in the year 1583. as is attested by Hospinian That all Jesuits in the world had entred into an holy Vow and Covenant any way to destroy all Heretical Kings nor did they despair of doing it effectually so long as any one Jesuit should remain in the World And Father Creswel a bird of the same feather in his Philopater lays down this sweet Lesson Ita informandos quoscunque Catholicos ut oblatâ caedis occasione nullo impedimento se dimoveri patiantur That all Catholicks are to be taught and instructed that when they have an opportunity to kill Hereticks Kings or others 't is no matter they should not spare them nor suffer any impediment to hinder them from the slaughter SECT 2. This is their Doctrine now let us see their Practices here in England ever since the Reformation The Raign of our good King Edward the Sixth was but short whether not shortned by Popish Arts is deservedly questioned and he himself a minor yet during his time there were Rebellions and Commotions in Somersetshire and Lincolnshire for which many were Executed then in Cornwal and Devonshire where above 4000 were slain and taken Prisoners by John Lord Russel Lord Privy-Seal then they Rebelled in Norfolk and Suffolk against whom the Earl of Warwick advanced with an Army and slew above 5000. About the same time there was a great Rising in the North and East-Ridings of Yorkshire but suppressed by the Lord President All these Insurrections were owned to be on the behalf of their R●●●gion and fomented and abetted by Popish Priests of whom divers were taken amongst the Rebels and deservedly punished SECT 3. To set forth all the Popish Plots Designs and Conspiracies against the Life and Crown of Queen Elizabeth of glorious memory it would be necessary to Transcribe a great part of the History of her Illustrious Reign and therefore we shall take notice 〈◊〉 of some of the most remarkable occurrences of that kind and the true Principles upon and by which they were promoted 1. As to the Original of Recusancy and occasions which rendred the Law against Papists absolutely necessary it must be remembred that from the First to the Eleventh year of the Reign of that Queen Papists generally repaired to our Churches see the proceedings against the Powder-Traitors p. 109. I my self saith Sir Edward Coke have seen Cornwallis Beddingfield and others notorious and zealous Papists at Church making no doubt of Conscience to joyn with us in Prayer But about the year 1569 Pope Pius the Fifth was no sooner seated in the Pontificial Chair but he began practice to justle her out of her Royal Throne to this purpose he employed one Bidolph a Florentine to raise a Faction here and afterwards sent over Doctor Nicholas Morton to promote it engaged the Spaniard to assist the Conspirators and Chapinus Vitellius came privately over on other pretences to observe the success and head the Spanish Troops when they should arrive Pursuant to these Counsels the Earls of Northumberland and Westmoreland with 4000 Foot and 600 Horse appear in open Rebellion and declare for the Restitution of the Roman Religion but were soon put to slight and Sanders de Schismate Angl. tells us the reason viz. For that the rest of the Catholicks because the Pope had not yet publickly denounced sentence of Excommunication against the Queen so as they did not seem fairly absolved from her Obedience declined to joyn with them by which means they were easily chased by the Queens Forces into Scotland where afterward Northumberland being taken was brought back to York and there faith he happily ended his days by a glorious Martyrdome So usual a thing it is with these Popish Doctors first to excite people to the blackest Treasons and then guild over the deserv'd punishments which they suffer for the same with that specious Title His crafty Holiness was not insensible of the reason of this miscarriage and therefore to prevent the like failure and the better to encourage all his Catholick Vassals to joyn in such pious Rebellion against the Queen he early the next Spring sends forth his Roaring Bull or Sentence of Anathema wherein he first magnifies his own Office and Authority in these Rhodomontado's He that Reigneth on high to whom is given all power in Heaven and Earth hath committed the One Holy Catholick and Apostolick Church out of which there is no Salvation to One alone on Earth viz. to the Prince of the Apostles Peter and to Peters Successour the Bishop of Rome to be governed in plenitude of power c. Sanders 3. de Schism Angl. p. 368. Then having railed a while most Apostolically and called that incomparable Princess Flagitiorum serva the slave of wickedness and villanies he proceeds to Curse her in these words Therefore supported with his Authority who was pleased to place us though unable for so great a burthen in this Supreme Throne of Justice out of the plenitude of Our Apostolick power We do declare the aforesaid Elizabeth being an Heretick and favourer of Hereticks and all her Adherents to have incurred the Sentence of Anathema and to be cut off from the unity of Christs Body and by the Authority of these Presents We do deprive the said Elizabeth of her pretended Right to the Kingdom and of all Dominion Dignity and Priviledge whatsoever And We do Absolve all the Nobles Subjects and People of the said Kingdoms and all others who have in any sort sworn unto her from such Oath or Oaths and all manner of Duty Fidelity and Obedience and do forbid and command them and every of them that they presume not to obey her 〈◊〉 her Commands and Laws those that shall do otherwise to be lyable to the some Curse Id. Ibid. This Bull towards the end of May 1570. was brought over and fixed on the Gates of the Bishop of Londons Palace by one John Felton and Copies of the same sent to the aforesaid Bidolph to be dispersed throughout England Then and not till then it was that those inclinable to the Romish Superstitions did presently refrain our Churches would no longer hear the established Divine Service nor have any more Society with us in Prayer so that Reeusancy so called from their refusing to come to Church which as the word was scarce known till this time so was it not specially or particularly punished by any Law till afterwards in the Twenty third year of the Queen was not in them at first nor can be now for Religion but for acknowledging of and stickling for the Popes usurping power They absent themselves from our Churches not because there is any thing there transacted in it self unlawful or prohibited by the Word of God for then they ought always to have kept away but because the Pope in opposition to the Law of God enjoyning both Obedience to our Governours and Charity and Brotherly Communion amongst each other has forbidden them so to do and this unrighteous siding with the Pope against
precipitate to Ruine as aforesaid consult and use all Arts to exclude him from the Succession To this purpose Father Parsons Cardinall Allen and others contrive a mischievous Book under the counterfeit Name of Doleman wherein divers Titles are started and 't is laid down as a Fundamental Maxime That none but a Roman Catholick how near soever in Blood ought to be admitted King and therefore therein by forged devices the Title of the Infanta Isabella of Spain is preferred before the indubitable Right of the said King James and all the English in the Spanish Seminaries were compell'd to Swear to maintain the same And Tho. Winter and Tesmond a Jesuit were sent over Anno 1601. into Spain to manage this Design in that Court by the Assistance of Father Croswel Legier-Jesuit there 2. In Farther pursuance of this Pope Clement the Eighth sent privately over to Father Garnet the then Pro●incial of the Jesuits two Bulls one to the ●aiety directed to the Nobles and Gentlemen of England that were Catholicks the other to his Beloved Sons the Arch-Priest and the rest of the English Catholick Clergy● the effect of both was That whoever after the death of Queen Elizabeth whether by course of nature or otherwise should claim the Crown of England though never so directly and nearly interessed therein by Descent and Blood-Royal yet unless he were such an one as would not onely Tolerate the Catholick meaning Romish Religion but would likewise take an Oath to promote it with all 〈◊〉 might and endeavours they should not admit or receive him for their King but oppose his Entry and Claim with all their power Which in plain English was meerly designed and directly tended to obstruct King James though not particularly named and Exclude him and his Family from the Crown And was not this a sufficient tast of the Popes good-will a notable earnest of the Papists Loyalty to him 'T is true when the Conspirators saw him so unanimously Proclaimed the State setled and a Peace with Spain so far advanced that that generous Monarch began to refuse them the expected Assistances then and not till then Garnet as himself alleadged burnt the said Bulls and quitted the Project but why onely because they despaired of effecting it 3. The more to prepossess the minds of the English against the said King James that they might keep him out or at least that themselves might have some colour for their future intended Conspiracies if he should come in Watson a Priest having some time heretofore got access once or twice to His Majesty at Edenburgh did with the Arch-Traitor Piercy and others of the Popish Crew most falsely devise and divulge a scandalous Report as if His Majesty had promised that whenever he should come to the Crown of England He would Establish or at least Tolerate the Popish Religion Than which nothing was ever more remote from or contrary to his Royal Thoughts And Watson himself but two days before his death confessed it to be a Lie of their own forging spread abroad meerly that they might kill two Birds with one stone viz. bring an odium upon him from the Protestants for making such a promise and the like from the Papists on pretence of breaking it In which latter respect it took effect though not in the former for Sir Everard Digby at his death and other Gun-powder Traitors made use thereof alleadging that they were exasperated to that horrid Attempt because the King had not kept his promise with Catholicks SECT 2. These were the good Officer of the Pope these the dutiful respects of the Priests and Papists paid to King James before he was actually Estated in the English Throne Whence we may judge how little welcome they were like to afford him at his Entry and of this the worthy Authour of a Treatise published in the beginning of King James's Reign before the Gun-powder-Treason Intituled A Consideration of the Papists Supplication gives us a notable instance from his own Experience and Observation in these words p. 3. My self can testifie that here in Oxford at what time His Majesty was proclaimed King of England c. a man might easily have traced and culled out every Papist within this City by his extraordinary howling and sobbing for grief that their hopes were frustrated and their expectation all in vain some of the simpler sort crying out in express terms Alas alas How shall the poor Catholicks do now we are all undone we are undone whereas all the rest of His Majesties Liege and Loyal Subjects by manifold Tokens declared their extraordinary rejoycing Their demeanor afterwards was suitable to these beginnings for soon after his arrival at London the said Watson and Clark two Secular Italianated Priests wheadled in several of the Nobility and Gentry as the Lords Cobbam and Gray Sir Walter Rawleigh Sir Griffin Markham George Brooke and others into a dangerous Conspiracy to have surprized the Kings Person and his Son Prince Henry and to keep them Prisoners in the Tower or Dover Castle till by Duress they had obtained their ends viz. A Toleration of Religion and some other Projects and then having obtained their Pardons they were to share amongst them the grand Offices of the Realm just as their Successors Whitebread Coleman c. had lately designed viz. Watson was to be Lord Chancelour the Lord Gray Earl Marshal of England George Brooke Lord Treasurer Sir Griffin Markham Secretary of State c. But though several were found guilty onely Watson Clark and Brooke were then Executed and Sir Walter Rawleigh on the same Conviction many years after 'T is observable that Watson though a Secular Priest had yet learned the art of Equivocation as well as the Jesuits For he insisted that this Conspiracy was no Treason against the King and being at last put to explain himself gave this doughty reason That a King was no King before he was Anointed and the Crown solemnly set on his head and King James being not yet crowned therefore they might lawfully conspire against him without commitring any Treason Amongst other things which Watson Confessed one was that he had endeavoured to draw in several of the Society of Jesuits into this Plot but they declined it saying They had another of their own then on foot and that they would not mingle Designs with him for fear of hindring one the other Vide Watsons Confession What such their Design was though he could not yet time in few years after did discover for in the next place appears that horrid never-to-be-forgotten Popish Powder-plot a Treason that as it exceeded all that had ever been before in the World so it was believed it would have surpassed in its mischievous Design Extent and Cruelty all that teeming Hell and Rome could have bred at any time afterwards had not this last Internal Conspiracy of the same Blo●●y Tribe against our present Gratious King Charles the Second and the Establisht Religion and Government of England vut-gone it in
Coach and Horses in the same Street both Irish men were Engaged in the same Design that Father Gifford promised this Examinate One Hundred Pounds for to carry on the Work and told him He was to have the money from the Church That the said Gifford Clinton Flower and He did use to meet in St. Jame's Feilds in the dark of the Evening and there to discourse of these matters and that the several Informations that he had given to the said Elizabeth Oxley he had from the said Father Gifford He further said That the said Flower and Clinton told him the said Stubbs That they would carry on the said Fire and that they had Fireballs for that purpose and that they would fire other Houses in Holborn at the same time He confessed he was at the Fire in the Temple but was not Engaged to do any thing in it That Gifford told him that there were English French and Irish Roman Catholicks enow in London to make a very good Army and that the French King was coming with 60 Thousand men under a pretence of a Progress to shew the Dauphin his Dominions but it was to plant them along the Coasts at Diep Bulloign Calais and Dunkirk to be presently ready to be Landed in England when there was an opportunity which he doubted not but might be by the middle of June for by that time all the Roman Catholicks here would be ready who were all to rise and with the Assistance of the French Forces to cut off and utterly destroy the Hereticks that then the Papists were to be distinguish't by marks in their Hats and that the said Father Gifford doubted not but he should be an Abbot or a Bishop when the work was over for the good Service he had done who frequently told this Examinate and the said Flower and Clinton That it was no more Sin to Kill an Heretick than to knock a Dog o' th head and that they did God good Service in doing what mischeif they could by Firing their Houses That it was well Sir Edmundbury Godfrey was Murther'd for he was their devilish Enemy That Coleman was a Saint in Heaven for what he had done c. That the Examinate was fearful he should be Murther'd for this Confession the said Father Gifford having sworn him to Secrecy and told him he should be damn'd if he made any discovery and should be sure to be Kill'd but gave him leave to take the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance because he was an House-keeper and it was necessary that he should stay in Town to help to promote the work of Burning therefore the taking of such Oaths to him should be no sin April the 15th That worthy Patriot Sir Thomas Player giving the House of Commons information concerning this matter of Oxley and Stubbs the Examinations were transmitted to the Lords and the Lords sent them to the secret Committee to make a further inspection and progress therein but they had their hands so full of Business that it was thought fit to appoint a Special Committee for this very purpose before whom the Parties were again Examined and gave them such satisfaction that the House became Suitors to his Majesty that they might both have his gracious Pardon which was granted and a Proclamation but not till the 4th of May set forth Reciting That whereas due Information hath been given that Morrice Gifford a Popish Priest Roger Clinton Derby Molraine alias Flower and several other Persons of the Romish Religion have out of their detestable and barbarous Malice conspired and agreed together to set on Fire the City of London the Suburbs thereof and the places thereunto Adjacent and have in prosecution of such their devilish and wicked Design procured divers Mansion Houses within the said City Suburbs and parts adjacent at sundry times and in divers places to be set on Fire and Burnt The King 's most Excellent Majesty at the humble desire of the Commons in Parliament Assembled doth Command the said Gifford Clinton and Flower who are fled from Justice to render themselves by the 10th of May instant and is pleased to promise 50 l. Reward to any that should apprehend any of them or if any of themselves should come in and discover his Accomplices so as any of them may be taken and Convicted he shall not only have his Pardon but the 50 l. also for each Incendiary As this ingenious Confession of Oxley and Stubbs was a grand Confirmation and undeniable proof of the restless Malice of these bloody Priests so 't is a notable Corroboration of the Truth and sincerity of Mr. Bedloes Evidence for how was it possible if what he says were not certain Truth but only contrived Stories as Papists calumniat How is it probable I say That Stubbs should happen so exactly to accuse the very same man which Mr. Bedloe had done for the Instigator to these barbarous Attempts of Firing for at that time Mr. Bedloe though he had given in such his Informations to the Committee of Secrecy yet had not published the same abroad so that Stubbs could not then have any notice thereof On the 20th of April happen'd an extraordinary Change at Court no less unexpected than grateful to the people who by such alteration of Ministers did hope to find considerable improvements in the management of the publick Affairs for his Majesty having caused his Privy Council to be extraordinarily summon'd was pleas'd by the Lord Chancellor to dissolve them and to declare his Pleasure That for the future their constant Number should be limited to that of Thirty whereof Fifteen to be of his chief Officers who shall be Privy Councellors by their Places Ten others of the Nobility and Five Commons of the Realm whose known Abilities Interest and Esteem in the Nation shall render them without all suspicion of either mistaking or betraying the true Interest of the Kingdom These Fifteen Officers to which the Quality of a Privy Councellor was hereby annext are The Arch-Bishop of Canterbury The Bishop of London The Lord Chancellor One of the Lord Cheif Justices The Admiral The Master of the Ordnance The Treasurer and Chancellor or First Comissioner of the Exchequer The Lord Privy-Seal The Master of the Horse The Lord Steward The Lord Chamberlain of the Houshold The Groom of the Stole Two Secretaries of State And that there shall be a President of the Council when necessary and room for the Secretary of Scotland when any such shall be here The Names of the New Privy Council then Establisht were as follows His Highness Prince Rupert William Lord Arch Bishop of Canterbury Heneage Lord Finch Lord Chancellor of England Anthony Earl of Shaftsbury Lord President of the Council Arthur Earl of Anglesey Lord Privy-Seal Christopher Duke of Albemarle James Duke of Monmouth Master of the Horse Henry Duke of New-Castle John Duke of Lauderdaile Secretary of State for Scotland James Duke of Ormond Lord Steward of the Houshold Charles Lord Marquess
greatest hopes of Success against our Religion in the Enemies thereof the Papists are founded in the execrable Designs which they have laid against the Sacred Person and Life of your Majesty which it is not onely our Duty but our Interest with the greatest hazards to preserve and defend We have applyed our selves to the making such provision by Law as may defeat these Popish Adversaries their Abettors and Adherents of their hopes of gaining an advantage by any violent attempts against your Majesty and may utterly frustrate their expectation of Subverting the Protestant Religion thereby in time to come And further to obviate by the best means we can all wicked practices against your Majesty whilest any such Lawes are in preparation and bringing to perfection It is our resolution and we do Declare That in defence of your Majesties Person and the Protestant Religion we will stand by your Majesty with our Lives and Fortunes and shall be ready to Revenge upon the Papists any violence offered by them to your Sacred Majesty in which we have your Majesty will gratiously please to be the more assured as We our Selves are the more encouraged in that the Hearts of all your Majesties Protestant Subjects with the most sincere affection and zeal joyn with us herein But this Zeal of the House of Commons running to so high a pitch touching the Succession together with some unhappy misunderstandings arising between them and the House of Lords concerning the Tryal of the Popish Lords and Earl of Danby as shall be related in the next Chapter His Majesty to allay the same was pleased first to Prorogue and then to put a period to them by a Dissolution of that Parliament by a Proclamation dated at Windsor the 12th of July 1679. But therein graciously declaring that a New one should be called to begin and be holden on Tuesday the 7th which was afwards altered to Friday the 17th of October CHAP. XVII The Proceedings against the Popish Lords in the Tower WE have before related the Commitment of these Lords to the Tower for High Treason after which followed this Vote in the House of Commons in the old Parliament Decemb. 5th 1678. Resolved That the House do proceed by way of Impeachment of High Treason and other High Crimes and Misdemeanours against the Lord Arundel of Warder Lord Powis Lord Petre Lord Bellasis and Viscount Stafford and a Committee appointed to draw up Articles of Impeachment against them Which Vote was Communicated to the House of Lords and the several Lords Charged by several Members in these words The Commons in Parliament having received Information of divers Traiterous Practices and Designs of a great Peer of this House Henry Lord Arundel of Warder have Commanded me to Impeach the said Henry Lord Arundel of Warder of High Treason and other high Crimes and Misdemeanours They have further Commanded me to acquaint your Lordships that they will within a convenient time exhibit to your Lordships particular Articles of the Charge against him Thus standing Impeached they continued in the Tower all the Interval of Parliament and as soon as the next Parliament was settled to Business they forgot not their Lordships For March 20th 1678. it was Ordered That a Committee of Secrecy be appointed to take further Evidence and prepare Articles against the Lords in the Tower who stand Impeached of High Treason and take such further Informations as they shall receive touching the Plot in general and the Death of Sir Edmundbury Godfrey and that this Committee have power to send for Persons Papers and Records and that they sit de die in diem and the Quorum to be Three The Articles at last Exhibited were as follows Articles of Impeachment of High Treason and other high Crimes and Offences against William Earl of Powis William Viscount Stafford Henry Lord Arundel of Warder William Lord Petre and John Lord Bellasis now Prisoners in the Tower THat for many Years now last past there hath been contrived and carried on a Traiterous and Execrable Conspiracy and Plot within this Kingdom of England and other places to alter change or subvert the Antient Government and Laws of this Kingdom and Nation and to suppress the true Religion therein established and to Extirpate and destroy the Professors thereof which said Plot and Conspiracy was contrived and carried on in divers places and by several ways and means and by a great number of Persons of several Qualities and Degrees who acted therein and intended to execute and accomplish the aforesaid Wicked and Traiterous Designs and Purposes That the said William Earl of Powis William Viscount Stafford Henry Lord Arundel of Warder William Lord Petre and John Lord Bellasis together with Philip Howard commonly called Cardinal of Norfolk Thomas White aliàs Whitebread commonly called Provincial of the Jesuits in England Richard Strange late Provincial of the Jesuits in England Vincent commonly called Provincial of the Dominicans in England James Corker commonly called President of the Benedictines Sir John Warner aliàs Clare Baronet William Harcourt John Keines Nicholas Blundel Pole Edward Mico Thomas Beddingfield Bazil Langworth Charles Peters Richard Peters John Conyers Sir George Wakeman John Fenwick Dominick Kelly Fitz Gerald Evers Sir Thomas Preston William Lovel Jesuits Lord Beltamore John Carrel John Townely Richard Langhorn William Foggarty Thomas Penny Matthew Medbourn Edward Coleman William Ireland John Grove Thomas Pickering John Smith and divers others Jesuits Priests and Fryars and other persons as false Traitors to his Majesty and this Kingdom within the time aforesaid have Traiterously consulted contrived and acted to and for the accomplishing of the said wicked pernicious and Traiterous Designs and for that end did most wickedly and Traiterously agree conspire and resolve to Imprison Depose and Murther his Sacred Majesty and to deprive him of his Royal State Crown and Dignity and by malicious and advised speaking writing and otherwise declared such their Purposes and Intentions and also to subject this Kingdom and Nation to the Pope and his Tyrannical Government And to seize and share amongst themselves the Estates and Inheritances of his Majesties Protestant Subjects and to Erect and Restore Abbies Monasteries and other Convents and Societies which have been long since by the Laws of this Kingdom supprest for their Superstition and Idolatry and to deliver up and restore to them the Lands and Possessions now Invested in his Majesty and his Subjects by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm And also to Found and Erect new Monasteries and Convents and to remove and deprive all Protestant Bishops and other Ecclesiastical Persons from their Offices Benefices Preferments and by this means to destroy his Majesties Person extirpate the Protestant Religion overthrow the Rights Liberties and Properties of his Majesties good Subjects Subvert the Lawful Government of this Kingdom and subject the same to the Tyranny of the See of Rome That the said Conspirators and their Complices and Confederates Traiterously had and held several Meetings
said days of Tryal appointed by your Lordships were so near to the time of your said Message that these Matters and the Method of Proceeding upon the Tryal could not be Adjusted by Conference betwixt the two Houses before the Day so nominated And consequently the Commons could not then Proceed to Tryal unless the Zeal which they have for speedy Judgment against the Earl of Danby that so they might proceed to Tryal of the other Five Lords should induce them at this Juncture both to admit the inlargement of your Lordships Jurisdiction and to sit down under these or any hardships though with the hazard of all the Commons Power of Impeaching for time to come rather than the Tryal of the said Five Lords should be deferred for some short time whilst these Matters might be agreed on and settled For Reconciling Differences in these great and weighty Matters and for saving that time which would necessarily have been spent in Debates and Conferences betwixt the two Houses and so expediting the Tryal without giving up the Power of Impeachment or rendring them ineffectual The Commons thought fit to propose to your Lordships that a Committee of both Houses might be appointed for this purpose At which Committee when agreed to by your Lordships it was first proposed That the time of Tryal of the Lords in the Tower should be put off till the other Matters were Adjusted and it was then agreed That the Propositions as to the time of the Tryal should be the last thing considered And the effect of this Agreement stands reported upon your Lordships Books After which The Commons communicated to your Lordships by your Committee a Vote of theirs viz. That the Committee of the Commons should insist upon their former Vote of their House That the Lords Spiritual ought not to have any Vote in any Proceedings against the Lords in the Tower and that when that Matter should be settled and the Method of Proceedings Adjusted the Commons would then be ready to proceed upon the Tryal of the Pardon of the Earl of Danby against whom they had before Demanded Judgment and afterwards to the Tryal of the other Five Lords in the Tower Which Vote extended as well to the Earl of Danby as the other Five Lords but the Commons as yet received nothing from your Lordships towards an Answer of that Vote save that your Lordships have acquainted them that the Bishops have asked leave of the House of Peers that they might withdraw themselves from the Tryal of the said Five Lords with liberty of entring their usual protestation And though the Commons Committee have almost daily Declared to your Lordships Committee that that was a necessary point of Right to be settled before the Tryal and offered to debate the same your Committee always answered That they had not any Power from your Lordships either to conser upon or to give any Answer concerning that Matter And yet your Lordships without having given the Commons any satisfactory Answer to the said Vote or permitting any Conference or Debate thereupon and contrary to the said Agreement did on Thursday the Twenty Second of May send a Message to the Commons Declaring That the Lords Spiritual as well as Temporal had Ordered that the Twenty Seventh of this instant May be appointed for the Tryal of the Five Lords So that the Commons cannot but apprehend that your Lordships have not only departed from what was agreed on and in effect laid aside that Committee which was Constituted for preserving a good understanding betwixt the two Houses and better dispatch of the weighty Affairs now depending in Parliament But must also needs conclude from the Message and the Votes of your Lordships on the Fourteenth of May That the Lords Spiritual have a Right to stay and sit in Court till the Court proceeds to the Vote of Guilty or not Guilty And from the Bishops asking leave as appears by your Lordships Books two days after your said Vote that they might with-draw themselves from the Tryal of the said Lords with liberty of entring their usual Protestation and by their persisting still to go on and give their Votes Proceedings upon the Impeachment that their desire of leave to with-draw at the said Tryal is only an Evasive Answer to the before mentioned Vote of the Commons and chiefly intended as an Argument for a Right of Judicature in Proceedings upon Impeachments and as a Reserve to judg upon the Earl of Danby's Plea of Pardon and upon these and other like Impeachments although no such Power was ever claimed by their Predecessors but is utterly denyed by the Commons and the Commons are the rather to beleive it so intended because the very asking leave to withdraw seems to imploy a Right to be be there and that they cannot be absent without it And because by this way they would have it in their Power whether or no for the future either in the Earl of Danby's Case or any other they will ever ask leave to be absent and the Temporal Lords a like Power of denying leave if that should once be admitted necessary The Commons therefore are obliged not to proceed to the Tryal of the Lords on the Twenty Seventh of this instant May but to Adhere to their aforesaid Vote And for so doing besides what hath been now and formerly by them said to your Lordships do offer you these Reasons following Reasons I. Because your Lordships have received the Earl of Danby's Plea of Pardon with a very long and usual Protestation wherein he hath Aspersed his Majesty by false Suggestions as if his Majesty had Commanded or Countenanced the Crimes he stands charged with and particularly suppressing and discouraging the Discovery of the Plot and endeavouring to Introduce an Arbitrary and Tyrannical way of Government Which remains as a Scandal upon Record against his Majesty tending to render his Person and Government odious to his People against which it ought to be the first and principal care of both Houses to Vindicate his Majesty by doing Justice upon the said Earl II. The Setting up a Pardon to be a Bar of an Impeachment defeats the whole use and effect of Impeachments and should this point be admitted or stand doubted it would totally discourage the exhibiting any for the future whereby the cheif Institution for the Preservation of the Government and consequently the Government it self would be destroyed And therefore the Case of the said Earl which in consequence concerns all Impeachments whatsoever ought to be determined before that of the said Five Lords which is but their particular Case III. And without resorting to many Authorities of greater Antiquity The Commons desire your Lordships to take notice with the same regard they do of the Declaration which that Excellent Prince King Charles the First of blessed Memory made in this behalf in his Answer to the Nineteen Propositions of both Houses of Parliament Wherein Stating the several parts of this regulated Monarchy he
says The King the House of Lords and the House of Commons have each particular Privileges And among those which belong to the King he reckons Power of Pardoning After the enumerateing of which and other his Prerogatives His said Majesty adds thus Again That the Prince may not make use of this high and perpetual Power to the hurt of those for whose good he hath it and make use of the name of publick necessity for the gain of his private Favourites and Followers to the detriment of his People The House of Commons an excellent Conserver of Liberty c. is solely intrusted with the first Propositions concerning the Levies of Money and the Impeaching of those who for their own ends though countenanced by any surreptitiously-gotten Command of the King have violated that Law which he is bound when he knows it to protect and to the protection of which they were bound to advise him at least not to serve him in the contrary And the Lords being Trusted with a Judicatory Power are an excellent Screen and Bank between the Prince and People to assist each against any encroachments of the other and by just Judgments to preserve that Law which ought to be the Rule of every one of the three c. Therefore the Power legally placed in both Houses is more then sufficient to prevent and restrain the power of Tyranny c. IV. Until the Commons of England have Right done them against this Plea of Pardon they may justly apprehend that the whole Justice of the Kingdom in the Case of the Five Lords may be obstructed and defeated by Pardons of like nature V. An Impeachment is virtually the Voice of every particular Subject of this Kingdom crying out against an Oppression by which every Member of that Body is equally wounded And it will prove a Matter of ill Consequence that the universality of the People should have occasion ministred and continued to them to be apprehensive of utmost danger from the Crown from whence they of right expect Protection VI. The Commons Exhibited Articles of Impeachment against the said Earl before any against the Five other Lords and demanded Judgment upon those Articles Whereupon your Lordships having appointed the Tryal of the said Earl before that of the other Five Lords now your Lordships having since inverted that Order gives a great cause of doubt to the House of Commons and raises a Jealousie in the Hearts of all the Commons of England that if they should proceed to the Tryal of the said Five Lords in the first place not only Justice will be obstructed in the Case of those Lords but that they shall never have right done them in the matter of this Plea of Pardon which is of so fatal Consequence to the whole Kingdom and a new device to frustrate publick Justice in Parliament Which Reasons and Matters being duly weighed by your Lordships the Commons doubt not but your Lordships will receive satisfaction concerning their Propositions and Proceedings And will agree That the Commons ought not nor can without deserting their Trust depart from their former Vote communicated to your Lordships That the Lords Spiritual ought not to have any Vote in any Proceedings against the Lords in the Tower and when that Matter shall be settled and the Methods of Proceedings adjusted the Commons shall then be ready to proceed upon the Tryal of the Earl of Danby against whom they have already demanded Judgment and afterwards to the Tryal of the other Five Lords in the Tower May 27th 1679. The Narrative and Reasons delivered at the Conference Yesterday with the House of Commons were again read and after a long Debate the Vote of this House dated the 13th of May instant and the explanation thereupon dated the 14th instant were read and the Question was put Whether to insist upon these Votes concerning the Lords Spiritual and it was resolved in the Affirmative But there were present These Dissenters Buckingham Huntington Kent Shaftsbury PR Bedford Winchester Rochester North and Grey Suffolke J. Lovelace Townsend Herbert Gray Stamford Newport Say and Seal L. Wharton Leicester Scarsdale Stafford Derby Delamer Howard Paget Clare Salisbury Falconberg Windsor CHAP. XVIII The Proceedings against Whitebread and the other Four Jesuits ON Friday the 13th of June 1679 was the grand Tryal of Five notorious Jesuits viz. Thomas White aliàs Whitebread Provincial or cheif of the Jesuits in England a comely antient man of a very grave deportment both at his Tryal and Execution William Harcourt pretended Rector of London who 't is thought after the first discovery of the Plot had been beyond the Seas and had the confidence to return hither again where being apprehended in his Lodging near long Acre he was by the Lords and Commons Committed to Newgate on the 8th of May last John Fenwick Procurator of the Jesuits in England John Gavan aliàs Gawen and Anthony Turner Committed first to the Gate-house and thence brought to Newgate There was at the same time Arraigned one James Corker a Benedictine Monk but he pretending he had not his Witnesses ready was put off and happy it was for him who since was acquitted with Wakeman whereas if he had then been tryed 't is most probable it would have prov'd as Fatal to him as the rest Whitebread and Fenwick pleaded that they were tryed before for the same Fact but the Court answer'd That though they were indeed once Arraign'd yet the Jury was discharg'd of them and they not then in any Jeopardy of their Lives and therefore must plead to this Indictment Then the Prisoner made a general Challenge That none should be of their Jury that were of any of the former Juries concerning the Plot Those now sworn were Thomas Harriot William Gulston Allen Garraway Richard Cheney John Roberts Thomas Cash Rainsford Waterhouse Matthew Bateman John Kaine Richard White Richard Bull. Thomas Cox The Proofs were long and consisting in divers particulars As 1. Dr. Oats Swears That the Consult of the 24th of April was by the Order of Whitebread the Prisoner at the See the Tryal of Whitebread c. P. 12. Bar as Provincial and that then the said Whitebread and Fenwick and Harcourt and Turner did all in his presence Sign the Resolve for the King's death 2. That Whitebread after his return back again to St. Omers did say That he hoped to see the King's Head laid fast enough only he had not the manners to give him the Title of King but shew'd his spight by calling his Majesty opprobriously These are those that speak evil of Dignities 3. That in July Ashby alias Timbleby brought over Instructions from Whitebread P. 13. to offer Sir George Wakeman 10000 l. to poyson the King and also a Commission to Sir John Gage to be an Officer in the Army which they design'd to raise which the Witness himself delivered to him the said Sir John 4. That Turner was at the Consult and at Fenwick's Chamber he saw him
Lord Gray Lord Howard of Escrick Duke of Monmouth Duke of Buckingham Sir Will. Waller c. which he did so well that he thought then His Majesty believed him being pleased to order him forty pound which he received fol. 35. And the more to possess his Majesty he sent him a Letter to New-market signifying he had discovered a great Correspondence between the Presbyterians and the Dutch fol. 36. 13. That pursuant to his undertaking with the Lords he went twice to Murder the Earl of Shaftesbury armed with a short French Dagger given him by Mrs. Celier who said there had been three of them left her by Rigaut pretending business as directed by Celier and the Lady Powis but was both times prevented by peoples coming and his own guilty fears for which the Countess called him Coward and Mrs. Celier said I will go and let the world know that some of our Sex are brave and more daring than the men whereupon she went pretending business but was prevented of an opportunity 14. Now the Countess put him on enquiring out Col. Mansels Lodgings delivered him Papers to plant there which under pretence of taking Lodgings in the same House and seeing all the Rooms he pin'd behind the Beds-head and then having informed two Officers of theCustom-house to come there to search for Prohibited Goods of Two thousand pound value on Wednesday the twenty second of October in the Colonels absence they came and he and one Bedford that lay with him the night before went in with them who finding nothing he directed them to remove the Bed and at last going himself behind it discovered the Papers and as the Devil would have it or rather the providence of Almighty God to detect the villany before they had well lookt into any of them cryed out Here is Treason The Officers carryed the Papers to the Custom-house which were ordered to be returned but the Colonel in the mean time having notice and that such a man who then and for some time before had gone sometimes by the name of Thomas and sometimes Willoughby had been concerned in the matter strictly enquiring after him found he lay at Mrs. Celiers House and there apprehended him and on the twenty third of October brought him before the Councel where accidentally he met with and abused one Mr. d'Oiley o● the Tower that had formerly prosecuted him 〈◊〉 uttering false Guineys who much helped to give an account of his former ill conversation yet he persisted stifly in charging Mansel and justifying his own innocency but on hearing all circumstances attested by the Searchers and other Witnesses produced by Colonel Mansel it apppearing that the Papers were laid by Dangerfield in the Colonels Chamber out of a malitious design he was committed to a Messenger whereupon he writ a Note to acquaint the Lady Powis therewith to be sent by his boy but the Messenger would needs see it and thereby the Correspondence between them was discovered 15. The twenty seventh of October Dangerfield was committed to Newgate by the Council on a full hearing though he had endeavoured all he could to defend himself by certain notable instructions received from the Lady Powis in the Stone-gallery in Whitehall which he particularly sets forth fol. 49. 16. On the twenty ninth of October Sir William Waller to whose indefatigable pains and courage this Nation and the Protestant Religion in general under God in an high measure owes its preservation searching Celiers House most providentially found hid in a Meal-tub the Paper-book tyed with red ribbons containing the Model of this designed Plot against the Protestants the matter whereof was dictated by the Lady Powis the grand Solliciness from the Lords in the Tower as aforesaid and proved by her maid to be hid there by her order It purported to be onely Remarks or chief Heads of things and persons to be charged As amongst the rest there were named the Lords Hallifax Shaftsbury Radnor now President of his Majesties Privy-Councel Essex Wharton the Duke of Buckingham and others to be of Counsel in this pretended Conspiracy the Duke of Monmouth General the Lord Grey Lord Gerard and his Son and Sir Tho. Armstrong Lieutenant Generals in this Rebellious Army Sir William Waller and others Major-Generals Colonel Mansel Quarter-Master-General To which was added Lists of particular persons usually meeting at four principal Clubs about the Town too tedious here to repeat 17. In the Papers foisted into Col. Mansels Chamber there were likewise long Lists of Names that were to be rendred obnoxious to this present Plot but no particular Copy or Account can thereof be given the Original Papers being so lodged that the same are not easily procurable till Authority shall think fit to divulge them See Col. Mansels Nar. fol. 104. 18. Mr. Dangerfield by this last Discovery at Mrs. Celiers finding himself trapt had not the confidence to stand out longer but on the last of October made application to the Right Honourable Sir Robert Clayton Lord Mayor before whom and other persons of Quality he made a candid Confession on Oath transmitted the next day to His Majesty and the Councel Whereupon and on farther Examination of the several persons concerned the Earl of Castlemain was Committed to the Tower whence he had not long since been Bayled as having been charged by Doctor Oates on the former Popish Plot Mrs. Celier and Mr. Rigaut to Newgate and Mr. Gadbury the Almanack-maker who though bred a Taylor hath for some years written himself Physician to the Queens most Excellent Majesty and formerly published a Figure which he called his Majesties Nativity in Print and constantly of late in his Calendar hath left out the Gunpowder-Treason-day to the Gate-house And on the fourth of November the Lady Powis being farther Examined and divers notable Circumstances which she had denyed being proved against her by other persons besides Mr. Dangerfield she was by order of the Board committed to the Tower for High-Treason in conspiring the death of the King And the said Dormer formerly Committed on suspition of being a Priest and Bail'd being found discoursing with her in the Lobby was upon other new matter charged on him by Doctor Oates taken into custody The Lord Castlemain twice in Michaelmass-Term brought his Habeas Corpus to be Bayled in the Kings Bench but was told by the Judges of that Court that though formerly when there was but one witness against him they had afforded it him yet having made such ill use of his Liberty and being now charged directly by two Witnesses for High-Treason they could not allow it and so was re-manded to the Tower By this whole contrivance it most evidently appears that though the Popish out-cries and clamours ran onely upon the Presbyterians and Fanaticks yet their aim was to ruine all that were true Protestants or honest Assertors of the Liberties and Property of the Subject As their naming his Grace the Duke of Monmouth the Duke of Buckingham the Earl of Essex
the Earl of Radnor late Lord Roberts the Lord Hallifax c. all persons of untainted Loyalty and far from Presbyterian or Fanatical Principles and yet these they had designed for destruction as the Chiefs of this new pretended Conspiracy Nor indeed can there be assigned above two or three in all their long forged List that can with any colour of reason or usual acceptation of the word be called Presbyterians SECT 2. But Abyssus Abyssum invocat one Popish villany treads on the heels of another There happened now likewise a yet farther detection of their desperate wickedness that would violate all rules of Morality and Laws both Humane or Divine to wreck their implacable malice on Dr. Oates and Mr. Bedloe and render them odious if it were possible to the people and thereby depreciate their Evidence Of this kinde was their horrid Conspiracy to charge them both with a malicious Contrivance against the Earl of Danby the late Treasurer and particularly Mr. Oates with an attempt of Sodomy To which purpose Will. Osborne and John Lane formerly Servants to Dr. Oates were suborn'd and manag'd by Tho. Knox late Servant to the Lord Dumblain Son to the said Earl of Danby but the Design laid and directed from time to time by wiser heads concerning which there hath already a perfect Account been emitted into the world by the appointment of Dr. Oates And also the Tryals of the said Knox and Lane at the Kings-Bench Bar Novemb. 25. 1679. where they were Convicted are published by Authority where the Curious may receive further satisfaction and therefore we shall only very briefly Epitomize some material matters of Fact which to perform intelligibly we must look back for some time For this hopeful Project had been long a brewing and had been once mortified before ' though now crawling towards a Resurrection it was Doom'd to the second Death which in the language of Divines is to say That it was damn'd as the malicious Contrivers are like to be without sincere Repentance 1. About April 1679. Osborne and Lane being for several Misdemeanours turn'd out of Dr. Oates's Service Knox so qualified as you have heard insinuates into their acquaintance and working upon their necessities engages them in the Design which to render more plausible he dictates four several Letters from them to himself as if they first mov'd him to it wherein pretending great trouble of minde for being privy to certain ill Designes the Dr. and Mr. Bedloe had against the Earl of Danby c. they desire him to put them into a way to discharge forsooth their Consciences by a Discovery These Letters were by one of them wrote from Knox's mouth and then very formally sent to him See the Narrative p. 5 and 6. 2. Knox hereupon after several meetings with them prepares an Information setting forth how he came by this Intelligence and what they had declared to him Another Information is likewise drawn in the names of Osborne and Lane setting forth several horrid expressions that Dr. Oates should use against his Sacred Majesty and other Persons of Quality thereby to render him odious to the Court so offensive to Christian ears and abominably scandalous as not fit here to be unnecessarily recited A third Information they had ready under Osborne's hand attesting a supposed Discourse that he heard between Dr. Oates and Mr. Bedloe contriving how to destroy the Earl of Danby that Mr. Bedloe should say he had invented a way viz. To swear that the Earl offer'd him Money to go beyond the Seas and thereby quash his Evidence which Dr. Oates should approve of saying It was the only or most dexterous course c. Other several Informations from Lane and Osborne That Dr. Oates and Mr. Bedloe should persuade them to carry on an Intrigue with some of the Lord Treasurers Servants and get Money of them by telling them Lies wherein the said Dr. Oates and Mr. Bedloe would instruct them and make such use thereof as should destroy the said Lord. And yet another Information of Lane's deposing That about the 24th or 25th of March last Dr. Oates having sent all the rest of his Servants to the Chappel did make an attempt to commit Sodomy with him And this Information was some time after Sworn before Sir James Butler But though somewhat subtlely contrived to cast an Odium on the Doctor and yet save the Informant from the Gallows he alledging that it was only an attempt and the perpetration thereof prevented by the noise of a Woman sweeping the next Chamber yet there are in it so many incredible Circumstances that had the Witness been of some Credit and the Doctor of none yet no man of sense could have entertain'd such a villanous nonsensical Story But not only the Law hath since vindicated that worthy person from this odious Scandal but the Informer himself hath voluntarily confessed both the utter falsity thereof and the Instigations that tempted him to alledge it The true Copies of all these Informations which they had cut out in readiness when ever they should think fit to make use of them see in the before-recited Narrative p. 7 8 9 c. 3. Their Tackling being thus prepared the Earl of Danby depended so much on the success that if we may believe the Oaths of the Conspirators it was chiefly on that Confidence that he surrendred himself to the Usher of the bla-Rod after he had for a considerable time absconded And the very same day Knox made Osborne and Lane swear again to stand to what he had taught them But Dr. Oates and Mr. Bedloe having some notice of the contrivance against them all three of the said Instruments were soon after taken into Custody And being Examin'd before a Committee of Lords they at first would acknowledge very little but after some time Lane voluntarily set forth upon his Oath how Knox had tamper'd both with him and Osborne instructed them what they should Swear against Oates and Bedloe and for the Lord Treasurer promised them Rewards dropt a Guinney which Osborne took up because they should not be able to say if questioned he had given them any Money How he paid Reckonings and provided Lodgings for them where he paid all charges for Diet c. And swore them to secrecy assuring them if either of them made a Discovery they should be killed And that since he was in Prison a Gentlewoman who by Mr. Dangerfield's Depositions seems to be Mrs. ●elier came to the Prison and sent him word that he should stick to Mr. Knox and whatever Money he required he should have it though it were a Thousand Pounds About the same time viz. 29 April 1679. Osborne by Order of the said Committee being Examined did upon his Oath deny he ever heard any such discourse between Mr. Oates and Bedloe about destroying the Treasurer nor any undecent words from Mr. Oates touching his Majesty the Queen or Mr. Chessinch c. but Deposeth that Knox promised him If he
by reason thereof hath so often been perpetrated or at least attempted heretofore by the Votaries of that Communion SECT 1. As for Principles of the Church of Rome relating to Government and the Obedience to be paid to Secular Princes where shall we look for them but in the Canons of her Councils the Decretals of her Popes and the publick Writings of her approved and most eminent Doctors In their great and by them acknowledged general Lateran Council held under Pope Innocent the Third in the year of our Lord 1215 it is expressly and Synodically concluded Can. 3. de Haereticis That the Pope may Depose Kings Absolve their Subjects from their Oaths of Allegiance Et Terram exponere Catholicis occupandam and give away their Kingdoms to Catholicks And this is received into the Body of the Canon-Law by Pope Gregory the Ninth cap. Excommunicamus 13 Extrav de Haeret. The most famous of their School-men Thomas Aquinas l. 22. q. 12. Art 2. affirms That any man sinning by Infidelity may be adjudged to lose all right of Dominion and therefore so soon as anyone shall for disowning the Faith be judicially denounced Excommunicate ipso facto his Subjects are Absolved from his Government and from any Oath of Allegiance whereby they were bound to him Nay another of their Doctors Dominicus Bannes is yet more hasty for he will have the Subjects discharged from all Obedience even before their Prince is so solemnly pronounced an heretick His words are these Num. 22. pag. 590. Where there is evident knowledge of the Crime Heresie he means that is whatever the Pope and his Priests please to call so the Subjects may lawfully if they have strength sufficient pray mark exempt themselves from the power of their Prince even before the Sentence Declaratory And this Conclusion saith he is followed by Cajetan and is the more common opinion of the Thomists who generally approve thereof If Kings become Hereticks forthwith their Subjects are freed from their Government saith Simancha in his Catholick Institutions a Book printed with great Approbation of Superiors Titul 23. N. 11. Nay less than down-right Heresie will serve turn to out them for Tit. 45. Num. 25. he tells us If a Prince be unprofitable a Crime capable of a large extension or make unjust Laws against Religion or good manners or do any thing to the detriment of Spirituals the Pope may apply a fit Remedy even by depriving such a King of his Government and Jurisdiction Their great Oracle Cardinal Bellarmine de Rom. Pontif. lib. 5. cap. 6. avers That the Pope as chief Spiritual Prince may change Kingdoms and take them away from one to give to another if it be necessary for the salvation of Souls And in the seventh Chapter he advanceth a little further for speaking of Heretical Princes as we know all Protestants are in their sence he says Omnium Consensu possunt ac debent privari suo Dominio It is agreed by all all Roman Catholicks he means That such Princes may nay ought to be deprived of their Dominions So that it seems 't is the Popes duty as well as in his power to do it and of all Roman Catholicks not onely to approve thereof but to be assisting therein Upon this ground Suarez a First-rate Jesuit and one that was thought fit by his Party to Du●l the learnedest Monarch in the world in his Book against King James intituled De Fide Catholic● adv Angl. lib. 6. cap. 16. num 14. speaks out more fully their Doctrine We must know says he that after the Sentence Condemnatory is given against a King by lawful he means Papal Authority to deprive him of his Kingdom or which is all one when by Sentence he is declared to be guilty of such a Crime as by the Law hath such a Penalty imposed as whatever they list to count Heresie hath by their Canon-Law then he that pronounced that Sentence or he to whom it is committed may deprive such King of his Kingdoms even by Killing him if he cannot otherwise do it But then mark how scrupulous and provident they are that the Trayterous Murther be done methodically and that none but Roman Catholicks be concern'd in the sacred Butchery For thus he goes on If the Pope depose a King yet he may not be killed or expelled save onely by those to whom He shall commit the doing thereof But if he commit the doing thereof to no-body then it belongs to him that is next lawful that is Catholick Successor to the Kingdom or if there be no such Successor or he neglect to do it then the Community of the Kindom provided always it be Roman Catholick succeed in that Right viz. to Expel or Kill such Excommunicated Prince Creswel alias Philopater sect 2. num 160. declares Omnium Catholicorum Sententia c. That 't is the opinion of all Catholicks That Subjects are obliged to Depose an Heretical King Nay to drive the Nail home he there adds Num. 162. Praecepto Divino arctissimo Conscientiae vinculo ac extremo Animarum suarum Periculo Haereticos Principes debent Deturbare That by the Law of God by the most strict Bond of Conscience and at the utmost peril of their Souls they are bound to dethrone and drive out such Heretical Princes Pursuant to this Doctrine of their Teachers it appears Papists may lawfully nay are bound under pain of Damnation to Renounce Resist and Murther their Kings whenever Excommunicated or Deposed by the Pope and are not to account it any Treason to kill such a King after such Deposition For neither is He then a King nor are his people being absolv'd from their Oaths of Fidelity any longer his Subjects Nor is it Murther for their Supream and Infallible Judge Pope Vrban the Second hath clearly resolved and determined it and made it Law Non esse Homicidas qui adversus Excommunicatos Zelo Matris Ecclesiae Armantur cos●● trucidant Gratian Lemma ad 47 cap. Excommunicatorum Caus 47. Quest 5. That they are not Murtherers or Manslayers who being stirred up with Zeal toward holy Mother-Church against persons Excommunicated do any way destroy them Now Simanea tells us Heretici omnes ipso Jure sunt Excommunicati de Excom tit 27. sect 1. fol. 116. Every Heretick stands and is to be reputed as Excommunicated if not de Facto yet de Jure in Law and Right and therefore may be deposed proscribed and murthered And that we may know who they mean by an Heretick Father Creswell in his said Book called Philopater thus resolves the Case Regnandi Jus amittit qui Religionem Romanam deserit Whoever forsakes or does not hold the Religion of the Church of Rome is that Heretick we speak of who is accursed and loses all Right of Dominion Furthermore by a Bull of Pope Paul the Fifth dated Anno 1558 and now inserted in the body of their Law lib. 7. Decret tit 3. de Haereticis Schism cap. 9. All Protestant Kings
Princes and Subjects and Quicunque bactenus à fide deviârunt seu in Posterum deviabunt seu in Haeresin incident c. Not onely all that at that time had swerv'd from the Roman faith but all such also as should at any time afterwards deviate from the same and sall into Heresie are declared Excommunicated and solemnly Cursed and if they be Kings or Emperours they are thereby totally and for ever deprived of their Kingdoms and Empires and rendered incapable ever to enjoy them So run the words expresly Regnis Imperio penitus in tetum perpetuo sint privati ad illa de caetero inhabiles incapaces Hence it appears that by the Tenor of this Babylonish Bull our gracious King and his Protestant Subjects now are as much under the cursed Cursing Sentence as Queen Elizabeth and her people were when it was first denounced and consequently deposed deprived and lawfully to be Kill'd c. But to make sure work the Curse is solemnly renewed every year on Maunday-Thursday by reading the Bulla Coenae Domini the words whereof are Excommunicamus Anathematizamus ex parte Dei c. We do on the behalf of God and by the Authority of Peter and Paul and also by our own Excommunicate and Anathematize all Hussites Wicklissists Lutherans Zwinglians Calvinists Hugonots c. under which Nick-names they comprehend all Protestants and whoever shall receive defend or favour them So that if any Papist shall assist or defend his Prince being Protestant it appears he is by this Sentence Excommunicated and Cursed by the Pope whom he verily believes if he be a true Roman Catholick and understands his Religion has right and power to do it A thousand other the like abominable Assertions tending directly to Sedition and Rebellion might be produced out of their Canon-Law and the Works of Bellarmine Suarez Parsons Allen Creswell Ros●aeus a Book Canoniz'd by the Pope in Consistory and others but these are sufficient Nor can the subtlest Jesuit ever avoid this Evidence with any colour of Reason or Modesty for here is the determination of one of their Infallible Councils and that confirmed by an Infallible Pope and the concurrent Testimonies of several the most eminent Fathers of their Church agreeable thereunto all printed with Approbation and never judicially condemn'd nor such their Opinions censured for though so many Indices Expurgatorii have stifled or at least maim'd and dismembred better Books yet these pass openly abroad untoucht and are allow'd to be read though the Bible be prohibited And therefore notwithstanding all their idle and impudent Evasions that these are but the Sentiments of particular private men 't is evident that their Church holds encourages and is justly chargeable with maintaining these Tenets destructive to Civil Government and enjoyning them to be believed and as opportunities shall serve put in practise by her Children SECT 2. This will yet be more undeniable if we consider the ill uses and applications of these Doctrines and how frequently in many Ages they have actually been put in execution to the great disturbance of Christendom and embroiling Kingdoms in Bloud and Confusion for never did savage Bear or Tygre fill his Den with the Bones of men and beasts as this Romish Wolf hath his Church with the Spoils of Princes there being scarce any Age since his Teeth were grown wherein he hath not to the utmost of his power made havock of their Lives and Estates Take a few Examples Anno 729 Pope Gregory the Second Excommunicated Leo Isaurus the Emperour because he would not admit of Images in Churches and for that Crime of opposing Idolatry forbad the payment of his Tribute and gave away his Territories to the Lombards whereby he and his Successors lost all the Western Empire which the Pope and the French-King afterwards shared between them And so they would do others Kingdoms now too if they could master them This glorious Act of Rebellion in Gregory against his Soveraign Lord Cardinal Baronius applauds saying Exemplum Posteris dignum reliquit ne in Ecclesiâ Christi regnare sinerentur Haeretici Principles He left a worthy Example to Posterity that Heretical Princes should not be suffered to Raign Soon after Pope Zachary Deposed Chilperick King of France and gave his Kingdom to Pepin one of his Subjects and Servants not so much as we find the reason rendred in Gratian for any Iniquity Chilperick was guilty of as for that his Holiness esteemed him Tantae potestati inutilem unfit or unprofitable for so great a power that is Pepin was like as he had reason after such a kindness to gratifie his Holiness more and serve him better How lamentably and shamelesly was the Emperour Henry the Fourth vexed by three Popes successively first Hildebrand picks a causeless quarrel with him Confictis Criminibus with alleadging false and feigned Crimes say the Historians of that Age Excommunicates him absolves his Subjects from their Obedience and sets up against him Rodulph Duke of Swaben and Burgundy a Feudatary Subject to the Empire sending him a Crown with this verse engraven Petra dedit Petro Petrus Diadema Rodolpho The Rock to Peter gave this Crown and Pow'r And with it Peter Crowns thee Emperour But for all the Popes Gift and Blessing Rodolph miserably perisht in his Treason However Hildebrand's Successour Pope Vrban carried on the implacable quarrel and unnaturally stirred up Conradus the said Emperours own Son to make War against his Father who dying in that Rebellion another Son who succeeded was arm'd against him who took him Prisoner and forc'd him to resign the Empire The Indignities offered to this Noble Prince by the Romish Lucifers have swelled divers Volumes Amongst many other Insolencies this was one That Hildebrand would not Release him from his Excommunication till on a time in the midst of winter he came Bare-footed to Camisium where the Pope lay and in that posture waited three days before the Gates of his Palace nor had he scarce at last got Absolution but for the intercession of a certain Dutchess for whom his Holiness had a kindness Henry the Fifth his Son for maintaining the Priviledges of the Empire and Rights of his Predecessours touching the Investiture of Bishops was Excommunicated by Pope Paschal the Second and by him and his Successours miserably vexed till his death The Emperour Frederick the First was scarce ever free from the Treasons of the Pope and his Clergy and at last to purchase his peace was fain to cast himself groveling upon the Floor whilst the Pope set his foot on his Neck profaning that saying of the Psalmist Thou shalt walk upon the Lion and the Asp the young Lion and the Dragon shalt thou tread under thy feet And when the Bigotted Prince to excuse that shameful servile submission was heard to mutter Non tibi sed Petro I do not pay this Homage to you but to Peter the haughty Prelate sternly replyed Et mihi Petro Sir you shall
a Popish Match with Spain which some corrupt Statesmen were so ●●nd of that to facilitate the same they not onely hazarded the Princes Person in a perilous voyage to Madrid but endeavoured to grant a Toleration to Papists in England which with a truely Christian Courage was opposed by Arch-bishop Abbot whose worthy Speech on this occasion speaks him so sound a Divine and so rule an Englishman that it deserves here to be inserted either to encourage or upbraid such as since in like Exigencies have bravely appeared for or treacherously betrayed the Protestant Religion and their Countries Liberty or endeavour to destroy both by a kind of refined Popery and Arbitrary Government against both which this good man was so zealous an Advocate A SPEECH of his Grace the Lord Arch-bishop of Canterbury to King James 1623. whilst the Prince was in Spain May it please it your Majesty I Have been too long silent and I am afraid by my silence I have neglected the Duty it hath pleased God to call me unto and your Majesty to place me in But now I humbly crave leave I may discharge my Conscience towards God and my Duty towards your Majesty And therefore I beseech you to give me leave freely to deliver my self and then let your Majesty do with me as you please Your Majesty hath propounded a Toleration of Religion I beseech you Sir take into consideration what your Act is and what the consequences may be By your Act you labour to set up that most Damnable and Heretical Doctrine of the Church of Rome The Whare of Babylon How hateful will it be to God and grievous to your good Subjects the true professors of the Gospel that your Majesty who hath so often disputed and learnedly written against those wicked Herefies should now shew your self as a Patron of those Doctrines which your pen hath told the World and your Conscience tells your self are Superstitious Idolatrous and detestable Add hereunto Sir what you have done in sending the Prince into Spain without the consent of your Council the privity or approbation of your people a great one as the Son of the flesh yet a greater as the Son of the Kingdom upon whom next after your Majesty are their Eyes and Hearts fixed and their Welfare depends and so tenderly is his going apprehended as believe it Sir howsoever his return may be safe yet the drawers of him into that action so dangerous to himself so desperate to the Kingdom will not pass unquestioned unpunished Besides this Toleration which you endeavour to set up by Proclamation cannot be done without a Parliament unless your Majesty will let your Subjects see that you will take unto your self a liberty to throw down the Laws of the Land at your pleasure What dreadful consequences Sir these things may draw after them I beseech your Majesty to consider and above all lest by this Toleration and discouentenancing of the true profession of the Gospel wherewith God hath blessed us and under which this Kingdom hath many years flourished your Majesty do not draw upon the Kingdom in general and particularly upon your self Gods heavy wrath and indignation Thus in discharge of my Duty towards God to your Majesty and the place of my calling I have taken humble boldness to deliver my Conscience And now Sir do with me what you please From these passages it appears that their Powder-Plots being defeated had not so far discouraged them but that they went forwards with the grand work of advancing their Superstitions and undermining the Protestant Religion and 't is not to be doubted but in all that silence afterwards during King James's Raign the Jesuits and their Agents were still like Moles busie at work under-hand and preparing matter for those dismal Confusions and Calamities which hapned to his most excellent though unfortunate Successour CHHP. IV. The Loyalty of Papists to King Charles the First enquired into Their Plot to Murder him in the year 1640. Their Rebellion in Ireland and Behaviour afterwards evincing that they were mainly instrumental in stirring up the late Civil Wars in England and cutting off that Pious Prince THere is nothing that our Modern Papists are wont more to boast of than their Loyalty to King Charles the First but with how little Truth and Reason will partly appear by these following Transactions SECT 1. Before ever the fatal disturbances and Rebellion broke out amongst us the Popish Conspiracies were industriously prosecuted in the said King Charles the First 's as well as in his Fathers days He began his Raign 27 March 1625. the times were cloudy and distempered two Parliaments had been called and Dissolved with dissatisfaction and a third was ordered to be Summoned on the 17th of March 1627. Some short time before which day the following Letter addressed to the Rector of Brussels was found amongst the Papers of some Jesuits taken in London which will give us no small light not onely how active and busie that Faction was in those times for hatching mischievous Intrigues and embroiling Affairs for advancing their cause but also points out some of the means they made use of and therefore we think fit here to Re-print it entire the rather for that the same hath been most imperfectly Published The words from an antient Copy carefully taken in those times are as follow Father Rector LEt not the damp of Astonishment seize upon your ardent and zealous Soul in apprehending the sudden and unexpected calling of this Parliament we have not opposed but rather furthered it for that we hope as much in this Parliament as ever we feared one in Queen Elizabeths days You must know the Council is engaged to assist the King by way of Prerogative in case the Parliamentary way fail You shall see this Parliament will resemble the Pellican which takes a pleasure to dig out with her own beak her own Bowels The Election of the Knights and Burgesses hath been in such confusion and in such apparent Faction as that which we were wont to work heretofore with much Art and Industry when the Spanish Match was in Treaty now breaks forth naturally as a Botch or Bile and spits and spites out its own rankor and venome You must remember how that famous and Immortal Statesman the Count of Gundamar fed King James ' s fancy and rocked him asleep with the soft and sweet sounds of Peace to keep up the Spanish Treaty Likewise we were much bound to some eminent Statesmen of our own Country to gain time in procuring those advantagious Cessations of Arms in the Palatinate and in admiring the Worth and Honour of the Spanish Nation and vilifying the Hollanders remonstrating to King James That that State was most ungrateful both to his Predecessour Queen Elizabeth and his Sacred Majesty That the States were more abnoxious than the Turk and perpetually injured His Majesties loving Subjects in the East-Indies And likewise That they had usurped from His Majesty the Regality of the Narrow-Seas
of the Marquess of Hamilton who oft was employed without effect by the King to appease the Scotish Tumults held Correspondence with Con who being once askt in joque by the Informant Whether the Jews also agreed with the Samaritans the said Con answered with a wish That all Ministers were but such as he 7. That one Tho. Chamberlain was sent over from Cardinal Richlieu and for four Months held Consultations with the Society how to exasperate these Northern heats to the best advantage 8. He discovers several of the Conspirators by name as Sir Toby Matthews a Jesuit whom he represents as a most indefatigable and dangerous Traitor one Captain Read a Scotchman dwelling near the Angel-Tavern in Long-Acre in whose House the Conspirators met usually once a day and there received and read their Letters from Rome and elsewhere and returned Answers where he saith the Gang might be surprized commonly every Friday He likewise names Porter Windebank Montague the younger and several others with divers circumstances corroborating his Information and particularly advises to intercept when the Post goes out weekly a Packet directed to Monsieur Strario Arch-Deacon of Cambray and another coming weekly from Rome which is brought under this Superscription To the most Illustrions Count Rosetti Legate for the time written in Characters but interpretable by the said Read whence farther light would be obtained All this was discovered to the Ambassador under an Oath of Secresie and the most importunate Requests to the King and Arch-bishop to keep it close till the business might be ripe and to conceal whence they had these Advertisements for otherwise the Discoverer would certainly be in danger of his life from the Confederates and their Associates And it appears by the Papers that both Sir William Boswel and the Arch-bishop were fully satisfied That it was real and of great importance care being ordered to be taken privately for the sounding the depth and further circumstances of the Design but the Disturbances in Scotland and afterwards in Ireland and England coming on apace branches of the same Treason being all assisted and fomented if not as most of them originally contrived by those Popish Incendiaries though disguised in other Factions 't is probable they might divert or forbear that part of the Poisoning the King and Bishop to attend the event of the other more general Plot of ruining these Nations which they saw then so hopefully advanced that they might conclude without ha●arding themselves in the odium there were enough other Ill-spirits which they had conjured up ●eady to do that execrable work for them another way However the Original Papers of the Discovery and Letters relating thereto being kept by the Archbishop were when his Study was ransackt ●ound amongst his Writings and then Published and now lately Re-printed by Authority under the Title of The grand Designs of the Papists in the time of King Charles the First worthy the perusal of such as would be farther satisfied SECT 3. Next followed the horrid Butcheries in Ireland beginning 23 Oct. 1641. concerning which however some of the spawn of the barbarous Actors in that cursed Tragedy or others their Relations or Accomplices of the Roman brood would now palliate and excuse it yet nothing is more known to all the world than that it was an open direct and most Traiterous Rebellion on the score of their cursed bloody Religion against their lawful and most gracious Prince designing to usurp the whole Government into their own hands root out the English Nation and the Protestant Name and which was the main end of all establish Popery in that Kingdom as is testified upon Oath by several persons examined and their Depositions published by the Kings Warrant all this begun and continued by Papists Onely not one Protestant amongst them But the Pope himself the Head of their Church in the person of his Nuncio Rinuceini Generalissimo of all their Forces by Land and Sea and all the Tribes of his Ecclesiasticks contributing all Assistance and Encouragement imaginable thereunto proceeding with that Inhumanity that above one hundred thousand innocent Protestants were by them basely in cool blood and with exquisite Torments and un-heard 〈◊〉 Cruelties Murthered and otherwise destroyed And which was even yet worse than that to shew their malice as well as disobodience to his said Majesty with equal impudence and falshood they pretended that it was done by his Commission and vouched the Broad Seal for their Authority purposely to enrage his Protestant Subjects in England and elsewhere against him The Popes Nuncio assuming nevertheless and exercising there the Temporal as well as Spiritual power granting out Commissions in his own name breaking the Treaties of Peace between the King and as they then stiled themselves the Confederate Catholicks heading two Armies against the then Marquess now Duke of Ormond then Lord Lieutenant and forcing him at last to quit the Kingdom all which ended in the Ruine of His Majesties Government and Person which but upon occasion of that Rebellion could never have happened And was not all this a prodigious demonstration of their Obedience and Loyalty to King Charles the First and the Crown of England It was constantly observed that the lower and more unfortunate the King was in his Successes in England the higher were the demands of the Irish so that they used all their Treaties as Stratagems to trepan not to serve His Majesty In the year 1643. when a Cessation was concluded with them by the Kings Authority and both English and Irish engaged by Articles to transport their Armies to England for His Majesties Service the Irish onely pretended they would do it when the English were gone and then treacherously ●yet according to one of their old rules Nulla fi●●es servanda cum Haereticis they plotted and attempted the ruine of the small remnant of English ●eft behind in Munster where the Lord Inchiquin Commanding by the Kings Commission and the English with him were necessitated to stand on their own defence against the Popish Army In 45. the said Confederate Catholicks having engaged their publick Faith to send 10000 men to serve His Majesty delayed neglected and failed ●herein to the great dis-service of His Majesty Did they not in 46. after a Peace concluded with them treacherously attempt to cut off the Lord Lieutenant and his Army who marched out of Dublin on security and confidence of that Peace did they not in 47 employ Commissioners to Rome France and Spain to invite a Forreign power into Ireland in the 9th Article of whose Instructions to be seen in my Lord Orrerey's Answer to P. W. they were ordered to make Application to his Holiness for his being Lord Protector of Ireland so that they were beforehand with the Phanaticks in England with the Title and if he should refuse then to offer the same to either of the Kings of France or Spain nay to any Popish Prince from whom to use their own words they might have
get any opportunity of seeing his Majesty except in Company of the Duke of York till the next Morning Then in the Park he acquainted his Majesty that his Enemies had a design against his Life and humbly pray'd him to use all caution for he did not know but he might be in danger in that very Walk Tyrants are always haunted with suspitions and fears But his Majesty arm'd with his Native Goodness and Innocence seem'd more surpriz'd with the strangeness of the news than any apprehension of the danger and only askt how that could be To which Mr. Kirby answered that it might be by being Shot at but to give a particular account requir'd more privacy His Majesty ordered him to attend his return out of the Park and then taking him aside laid his Commands on him to tell him what he knew who acquainted him that there were two Men by Name Grove and Pickering that watch'd an opportunity to Shoot his Majesty and that Sir G. W. was hired to Polsoh him as he had been the day before acquainted by a Friend who had a more full account thereof in writing and was near at hand ready to appear when commanded which his Majesty was pleased should be about Eight that Evening Accordingly Mr. Kirby and Doctor Tongue did at that hour attend his Majesty and in the Red Room at White-Hall delivered unto him the said 43 Articles Copyed out by the Doctor keeping the Original for his own security and both of them humbly begg'd that those Papers might be kept safe and secret lest the full Discovery should otherwise be prevented and their own lives indanger'd His Majesty was pleased graciously to answer That being to go next Morning to Windsor he would safely deposite the said Pap●is in the hands of one whom he could Intrust and with whom he would answer for their safety ordering them to wait upon the Earl of Danby then Lord Treasurer the next Morning which accordingly they did but it was After-noon before they could be admitted to speak with him When being brought to his Closet they found him with the Papers in his hand saying he had received them from his Majesty Sealed up and that they were of the greatest concern in the World But after some few questions very civilly for the present dismiss'd Mr. Kirby and the Doctor who two or three days after carried more Informations but could hardly come to speak with him only one of his Gentlemen was appointed to receive the Papers Sealed And about the 20th of Aug. Doctor Tongue offered to bring the said Pickering and Grove into St. James's Park that they might be taken with their Guns about them his Informant having assured them he could do it at any time if the King would please to be walking there but this was not accepted or neglected However shortly after Mr. Kirby shewed Pickering as he attended the Priests at Mass in Sommerset-House to one of the Lord Treasurers Gentlemen The 26th of Aug. Dr. Tonge told Mr. Kirby that he had Informed the Lord Treasurer how he might Intercept Letters that come to Grove which if it had been honestly done must of necessity have very much laid open their Traiterous practices the Jesuits Letters being generally directed to him But having heard nothing of it and the Treasurer being gone out of Town he was resolv'd to know if any thing had been taken or no Accordingly on the 31th of Aug. he made an Interest in a certain Letter Carrier belonging to the Post-Office who on the 3. of Sept. informed him that the said Grove had usually Letters every week amounting to three or four pound and that the very day before he had as many Forreign Letters as came to 4 s. and some Inland Letters but how many he could not positively tell nor could give account of any offered to be intercepted Doctor Oates on the second of Septemb. first discover'd himself to Mr. Kirby Lodging at Fox-Hall who all the time before had never seen his face nor heard his name but from thenceforth they met together and on the 4th of Septemb. he acquainted the said Mr. Kirkby that Whitebread the Jesuits Provincial was come to Town and having got intelligence that there was some Discovery made had Beaten him and charg'd him with having been with the King with a Minister and that he had Betray'd them The means and occasion whereby they came to have this notice and suspicion is thus set forth One Bedingfield a Jesuit deeply conecrn'd in the Plot and who had got as is said to be Confessor to the Duke of York had related in a Letter to Blundel another of the Gang that his Royal Highness had intimated some such thing to him viz. That a Gentleman in such-colour'd Habit and a Minister had been with the King and made some Discovery Now it happened that Mr. Kirkby when he waited on his Majesty as aforesaid had on a Suit much of the same colour with what Dr. Oates then usually wore which created such their jealousie However Dr. Oates denying it for in truth he had then never been with the King the Provincial at last seem'd Reconcil'd to him and only ordered him speedily to prepare to go beyond the Sea pretending he had some Business there for him to Negoriate Upon this discourse of Dr. Oates Mr. Kirkby finding him partly discovered and in danger resolved to go next day to Windsor desiring Dr. Tonge in the mean time to get his Information Sworn before some Justice of the Peace which on the 6th of Septemb. was done before Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey yet without permitting him to read the particulars only assuring him in general that it contained matter of Treason and other high Crimes and that his Majesty had a Copy of it In the mean time on the 5th Mr. Kirkby presented himself before his Majesty at Windsor but there having been some prepossessions to take away all belief of the Plot used by Bedingfield c. he could not that day or the next obtain Audience and therefore on the 7th repaired to the Treasurers Lodgings and acquainted his Man that the Original Informant was discover'd and beaten therefore desired his Lordships directions who sent out word that he would hear him But although Mr. Kirkby waited all that day was in his presence and offered to speak yet the said Treasurer declined it and on the 9th went away to Wimbleton Mr. Kirkby receiving this discouragement returned home In the mean time Dr. Oates holding on his Correspondence with the Jesuits on the 6th of Sept. at night coming to the Provincials Lodgings and attending at his Chamber door over-heard him and some others discourse concerning the disposing of a person saying This man has Betray'd us we will give 20 l. to a See Dr. Oate's Narrative p. 55. Coach-man to take him up who by By-ways shall carry him to Dover and when we have got him beyond Sea we will force him by Tortures to Confess who had been with
to avoid the Soldiers taking any notice had invited them into his House with Drink and Tobacco Thus sometimes Girald and Prance and sometimes Kelly and Green carried him up towards So-ho Fields hard by the Grecians Church and there Hill attended with an Horse and they set the body up before him and clapt the Sedan into an House that was Building there but unfinish'd till they came back and then Girald the Priest said I wish we had an hundred such Rogues as secure as we have this Then Prance because he was a House-keeper returned home and the other four went away with him one leading the Horse Hill riding and holding the Body and the other two walking by They carried him into an obscure place about two miles out of Town towards Hampstead near a place call'd Prim-rose Hill and there in a Ditch they left his Body Girald having run Sir Edmonds own Sword through him and left it in but the Scabbard and his Gloves they laid on the Bank at a small distance In the mean time Sir Edmund-burys Servants first and then his Friends and at last the whole Town were not a little concern'd for his abscence and there was once a Proclamation ordered to discover him but Countermanded by reason of false Information given by some Papists that he was living and well and there were several persons that went up and down to Coffee Houses to spread false Reports that he was gone into the Country to be Married to such a Lady whom they took upon them to name that they saw him at such or such a place c. That Saturday the 12th of October the very Evening that Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey was so Murthered did Father Harcourt the Jesuit lately Executed send away a Letter to Father Ewers a Priest at the Lord Astons in Stafford-shire wherein were these words This night is Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey dispatcht This Letter was received there on the Munday and shown to Mr. Dugdale as he hath since made See the Tryal of Whitebread c. p. 26. Oath at several Tryals which is further confirmed by Mr. Chetwin a worthy Gentleman who being then in that Countrey heard a report of it there by means of that Letter on the Tuesday which was before ever there was any discovery of it at London For here was no tidings to be heard what was become of Sir Edmundbury Godfrey till on the Thursday following being the 17th of Octob. and then two men passing over the Fi●●ls by chance spied the Gloves and Scabbard and as they came back going to the place discovered the Body in the Ditch The 20th of Octob. the King Issued his Proclamation Commanding all his Officers and Subjects to use their utmost diligence to find out and discover the Murtherers of the said Sir Edmund-bury Graciously promising 500 l. Reward to any that should make such discovery and if any one of the Murtherers should discover the rest he should not only be pardon'd but likewise have the said Reward But this Royal offer could not prevail with any of them to come in for the present but they seem'd more hardned in their wickedness by its success for about a Fortnight afterwards there was by them a Narrative of See Pran Narrative p. 18. this Heroick fact drawn up in Writing which Vernatti read in a Triumphing manner at a meeting they had at the Queens-Head at Bow and said that the same was drawn up to be shew'd to the Lord Bellasis and some other great persons that were the original Designers and Promoters of the business for their satisfaction and possibly it may since be sent to Rome and there finds as great approbation and causes as great Joy as the News of the Murther of King Henry the Third of France did upon which Pope Sixtus the Fifth made a Panegyrical Oration calling it the Work of God and preferring the Vertue Courage and Zeal of the Fryar that did it before that of Eleazer in the Macchabees or of Judith killing of Holofernes The 21th of Octob. the Parliament met to whom his Majesty in his Speech took notice of the Plot in these words I now intend to acquaint you as I shall always do with any thing that concerns me that I have been informed of a design against my Person by the Jesuits of which I shall forbear any Opinion lest I may seem to say too much or too little but I will leave the matter to the Law and in the mean time will take as much care as I can to prevent all manner of practices by that sort of men and others too who have been tampering in a high degree with Foreigners and contriving how to Introduce Popery amongst us October the 24th 1678. Mr. Oates was Examined in the House of Commons six or seven hours and about Nine a Clock at Night the House sent for the Lord Chief Justice Scroggs and he took Mr. Oates's Examination upon Oath and in the House ‑ Sealed 26 Warrants against several Lords and others that Mr. Oates had Sworn against whereupon the five Lords viz. The Lord Powis the Lord Stafford the Lord Arundel of Wardour the Lord Petre and the Lord Bellasis and Sir Henry Tichburn Baronet were taken into Custody and shortly after Committed to the Tower and about the 30th of Novemb. the Lords were Impeached of High Treason The same day James Corker was Committed to Newgate by Sir Charles Harbord and Sir Thomas Stringer for a suspected Priest who afterwards appeared to be one charged with the Plot And the 26th Matthew Medburn formerly a Player was likewise sent thither by the Lord Chief Justice Scroggs for High Treason who died in Custody the 19th of March following The 30th of October the Parliament having by an Address desired that Papists might be Banish'd the Town his Majesty set forth a Proclamation declaring that there was a Bloody Traiterous design of Popish Recusants against his Majesties Sacred Person and Government and the Protestant Religion commanding them all except settled House-keepers that would take the Oath of Allegiance and Supremacy which the Justices should be Impowered by Special Commission to Administer to depart the Cities of London and Westminster and all places within 10 Miles distance of the same In pursuance of this Proclamation many Papists pretending they could not in Conscience take the said Oaths did go out of Town with great Lamentation leaving their Trades and Dwellings But within a Week or two their Ghostly Fathers had fitted them with Dispensations as appears by the sequel and then they generally return'd again and freely without any Keckings of Conscience offered to swallow the said Oaths or indeed any other Test that could be tendred them Octob. the 31th Upon the further perusal of Mr. Colemans Papers and the Examination of Mr. Oates taken upon Oath it was Resolved by the House of Commons Nemine Contradicente That there has been and is a Damnable and Hellish Plot contrived and carried on by the Popish
the University as some report or whether drawn in upon his Marriage as others alleage or to gratifie a Rich Vncle of that Persuasion as a third sort relate it on which or whether on some other occasion different from all these he revolted is not much material but revolt he did to the Roman Church and became a mighty Bigot to advance the same and gain Proselytes He was a Person of rare natural and acquired parts and so well conceited of himself that he once undertook to be one that should manage a Conference concerning Religion against the Learned Doctor Stillingfleet and another Divine of the Church of England which discourse is extant in Print But his Talent lay more in News and Policy than Divinity being for some time Secretary to her Royal Highness the Dutchess of York he was a Leading-man in this Horrid Conspiracy and a prime Promoter thereof by his great Correspondency abroad both at Rome and in the French Court. Concerning the manner of his Commitment an Account is given before Chapt. the 8th On Saturday the 23 of November he was Arraigned at the Kings-Bench Bar the Indictment being very Expressive and Significant we shall for Example sake See Colemans Tryal p. 2. recite part of it viz. That as a false Traitor against our most Illustrious Serene and most excellent Prince Charles by the Grace of God c. his natural Lord having not the fear of God in his heart nor duely weighing his Allegiance but being moved and seduced by the Instigation of the Devil his cordial Love and true Duty and natural Obedience which true and lawful Subjects of our said Lord the King ought to bear towards him and by Law ought to have altogether with-drawing and devising and with all his strength intending the Peace and common Tranquillity of this Kingdom of England to disturb and the true Worship of God within the Kingdom of England practised and by Law Established to overthrow and Sedition and Rebellion within this Realm of England to move stir up and procure and the cordial Love and true Duty and Allegiance which true and lawful Subjects of our Soveraign Lord the King towards their Soveraign bear and by Law ought to have altogether to withdraw forsake and extinguish and our said Soveraign Lord the King to Death and final Destruction to bring and put The 29th of Septemb. in the 27th year of the Reign of our said Soveraign Lord Charles the Second c. at the Parish of St. Margarets Westminster Falsly Maliciously and Traiterously proposed compassed imagined and intended to stir up and raise Sedition and Rebellion within the Kingdom of England and to procure and cause a miserable Destruction amongst the Subjects of our said Lord the King and wholly to Deprive Depose Deject and Disinherit our said Soveraign of his Royal State Title Power and Rule of his Kingdom of England and to bring and put our said Soveraign Lord the King to final Death and Destruction and to overthrow and change the Government and alter the sincere and true Religion of God in this Kingdom by Law establish'd and wholly to subvert and destroy the State of the Kingdom and to Levy War against our said Soveraign Lord the King within his Realm of England And that to accomplish these his Traiterous designs and imaginations on the 29th of Septemb. in the 27th year of the King he Traiterously composed two Letters to one Monsieur Le Chese then Servant and Confessor of Lewis the French King to desire procure and obtain for the said Edw. Coleman and other false Traitors the Aid Assistance and Adherence of the said French King to alter the true Religion in this Kingdom Establish'd to the Superstition of the Church of Rome and Subvert the Government of this Kingdom of England c. Reciting his receiving an Answer from Le Chese his Correspondence with Monsieur Rovigni Envoy Extraordinary from the French King and Letters to Sir William Throckmorton in France Concluding in usual form That all this was done against his true Allegiance and against the Peace of the King his Crown and Dignity To this Indictment he pleaded Not Guilty and on Wednesday the 27th of Novemb. 1678. was brought to his Tryal To the Jury Empannel'd he made no Challenges Their Names were Sir Reginald Foster Baronet Sir Charles Lee. Edward Wilford Esq John Bathurst Esq Joshua Galliard Esq John Bifield Esq Simon Middleton Esq Henry Johnson Esq Charles Vmfrevile Esq Thomas Johnson Esq Thomas Eaglesfield Esq William Bohee Esq His Tryal as it held very long so it was managed with all Integrity and Moderation by the Court The Charge against him was made out two ways partly by Witnesses Vivâ voce and partly by Letters and Papers found at his House which he could not deny to be his own hand writing Dr. Oates was the first Witness produced to whom the Lord Chief Justice gave this grave Caution That he See Colemans Tryal p. 17. should speak nothing but the truth not to add the least tittle that was false for any advantage whatsoever mind him of the Sacredness of the Oath he had taken declaring that since the Prisoners Blood and Life was at stake he should stand or fall be justified or Condemned by truth The substance of Mr. Oates's Evidence was 1. That in Novemb. 1677. being brought acquainted with Mr. Coleman by one John Keins then Dr. Oates's Confessor who Lodged at Colemans House he carried some Letters for him to St. Omers in which were Treasonable Expressions of the King calling him Tyrant and a Letter in Latine enclosed to Monsieur Le Chese to whom Dr. Oates carried it from St. Omers to Paris in which there were thanks returned for the Ten thousand pounds by him remitted into England for the Propagation of the Catholick Religion and promising that it should be Imployed for no other purpose but that for which it was sent which was to cut off the King of England as appear'd by the Letter of Le Chese to which this was an Answer and which Dr. Oates saw and read 2. That Coleman was concern'd in the design of taking away the Sacred Life of the King for that when at the Jesuits Consult at the pag. 2. Whitehorse-Tavern in the Strand in April Old Stile and May New Stile and afterwards adjourned into several Companies It was resolv'd that Pickering and Grove should Assassinate his Majesty by Shooting or other means for which the latter should have 1500 l. and the former Thirty thousand Masses which at 12 d. a Mass amounted much what to the same sum This resolve was in his hearing Communicated to Mr. Coleman at Wild-House who did approve thereof and said it was well contriv'd 3. That in August 78. Mr. Coleman was present at a Consult with the Jesuits and Benedictine Monks in the Savoy for raising a pag. 23. Rebellion in Ireland and was very forward to have Dr. Fogarthy sent thither to dispatch the Duke of Ormond by
off so great a Scandal from their Party 2. They would seem not to know Mr. Oates or to have had scarce any acquaintance with him In answer to this he Swears to several Circumstances which they were forc'd to acknowledge As that Grove in December pag. 31. last lent him 8 s. to hire a Coach to Dover being then to go for St. Omers that Fenwick was his Confessor that the said Grove drank twice in his Company at the Red posts in Wild-Street and once more by a good token when he owned that he Fired Southwark assisted by three Irish men and that they had a Thousand pounds given them for it whereof he had 400 l. and the other 200 l. a piece And here as a Digression not altogether impertinent I cannot but inform the Reader that when Dr. Oates gave in his Informations to Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey when he read them and came to this passage concerning Grove Firing of Southwark being Article the 49th The said Sir Edmund-bury having it seems some knowledge of the said Grove said That he had been informed that the said Grove wrought so hard at the said Southwark-Fire and so over-heated himself that it was thought it would have cost him his life or words to that effect which hard working the said Sir Edmund-bury did before judge to have been in helping to quench the said Fire but as appears was indeed in promoting and carrying on the same which Circumstance unknown before to Dr. Oates doth exactly correspond with and confirm his Testimony in that point 3. Ireland endeavoured to oppose Mr. Bedloes Evidence who Swore that he was at the Consult at Harcourts Chamber in August Now he brings two or three to prove that he was not in London all the moneth of August and two of them but they are his Mother and his Sister say he went out of Town the 3d. of August and returned not till a Fortnight before Michaelmas And a Coach-man speaks of being with him from the 5th of August to the 16th and afterwards at Westehester But against these Peoples sayings whereof two were so related there was not only Mr. Bedloes positive Oath but likewise Dr. Oates's though he knew nothing of the particular Consult at Harcourts Chamber mentioned by Mr Bedloe yet he Swears directly that Mr. Ireland was in London the beginning of Septemb. by a remarkable Token that on the first or second of that moneth he had 20 s. of him And furthermore Sarah Pain formerly Grove's Servant and pag. 57. who knew Ireland very well of which knowledge she gives the reason because he came often to Grove's House and was the man that still broke open the Pacquets of Letters that her Master Grove carried about afterwards and Sealed all the Pacquets that went beyond the Seas and she Swears positively and by most certain Circumstances that she saw Mr. Ireland at a Scriveners door in Fetter-Lane where he Lodg'd about the 12th or 13th of August so that here were three clear Testimonies upon Oath to disprove this Allegation of Irelands which yet he insisted on at his Death with Solemn Protestations Whereas since it has pleased God further to manifest the falsi●y thereof by Mr. Jennison a Kinsman of his and then a Catholick as in due place shall be set forth whence we may take our measures what Credit is to be given to the dying Asseverations of such men 4. Mr. Ireland objected that Dr. Oates was all the moneth of May at Saint Omers when he Swears he was here at the Consult and to prove that he was so there then offered to bring a Certificate from St. Omers under the Seal of the Colledge for it seems the Youths either were not then come over or had not sufficiently Conn'd their Lesson But to this it was Answered that such a Certificate was not by the Law of England any Evidence in any case whatsoever much less to be allowed to them in this case for what Certificate could they not get from the Colledge at St. Omers if it might serve their purposes Lastly They essai'd to blast Dr. Oates's Credit with an Imputation of Perjury because they alleadged that there was once an Indictment against him for that Crime but upon Examination this appeared to be extreamly frivolous For 1. The pretended Perjury was only thus That Mr. Oates Swearing the Peace against a certain man did at the taking of his Oath say that there were some Witnesses that would evidence such a point of Fact which when they were produced would not testifie so much Now suppose this were true though it were never proved yet how could this be corrupt or wilful Perjury 2. There was no Record produced only a pretended Copy 3. It appeared if every any such Indictment was Exhibited it could not be made good for there was never any Conviction or Prosecution there-upon and if barely to Accuse would make a man Guilty who could be Innocent 4. Sir Denny Ashburnham who was called by the Prisoners to Discredit Dr. Oates was able to say nothing against him but this That he had known Mr. Oates in his Youth and that then he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Person of that Credit as to be depended on for what he should say and that had the discovery of the Plot come only from his Testimony he might have had same little daubt of it These are his very words p. 66. But then the very same Gentleman declares That as it is Corroborated with other Circumstances it hath saith he ibidem convinced me so that I am satisfied in the truth of the thing and I do think truly that nothing can be said against Mr. Oates to take off his Credibility This being all they had to offer in their own defence the full substance whereof we have impartially repeated with the Answers thereunto The Lord Chief Justice proceeded to sum up the Evidence and in his Speech to the Jury amongst many others had these excellent Expressions speaking of the Popish Priests and their Religion If they had not Murther'd Kings p. 73 74. saith he I would not say they would have done Ours But when it hath been their practice so to do when they have Debauch d mens Vnderstandings Over-turn'd all Morals and Destroy'd all Divinity What shall I say of them When their Humility is such that they tread upon the necks of Emperors their Charity such as to kill Princes and their Vow of Poverty such as to Covet Kingdoms What shall I judge of them When they have Licences to Lye and Indulgences for Falshoods nay when they can make him a Saint that dies in one and then pray to him as the Carpenter first makes an Image and after Worships it and can then think to bring in that Wooden Religion of theirs amongst us in this Nation What shall I think of them What shall I say to them What shall I do with them They Eat their God they Kill their King and Saint the Murderer they Indulge all sorts of Sins
to all other Treasons Crimes and Offences contained mentioned or specified in the said Impeachment the said Lord protesting his Innocency In the great Wisdom and Sentence of this Honourable Court shall always Acquiesce So the Rest Mutatis Mutandis But these Pleas being Judg'd unsatisfactory and illegal they were afterwards forc'd to plead the general Issue And now there were daily expectations of their being brought to Tryal and Scaffolds erected in Westminster-Hall for that purpose but in the mean time the Earl of Danby late Lord Treasurer whom the Commons had likewise Impeach'd for Treason and who had for some time absconded himself did on the 15th of April unexspectedly surrender himself and insisted on his Pardon which the Commons Voted Illegal and thereupon prayed Judgment against him on the Impeachment About this matter and also upon the Question whether the Bishops had a right to sit upon the Lords when they should be brought to Tryal some misunderstandings happened between the two Houses for removing of which and settling a good Correspondence the House of Commons used several Endeavours as by the following Paper may appear THE Reasons and Narrative OF Proceedings BETWIXT THE Two Houses WHICH Were delivered by the House of COMMONS TO THE LORDS At the Conference touching the Lords in the Tower On Munday 26th of May 1679. THE Commons have always desired that a good Correspondence may be preserved between the two Houses There is now depending between your Lordships and the Commons a matter of the greatest weight In the Transactions of which your Lordships seem to apprehend some difficulty in the matters proposed by the Commons To clear this the Commons have desired this Conference and by it they hope to manifest to your Lordships that the Propositions of the House made by their Committee in relation to the Tryal of the Lords in the Tower have been only such as are well warranted by the Laws of the Parliament and Constitutions of the Government and in no sort intrench upon the Judicature of the Peers but are most necessary to be insisted upon that the Antient Rights of Judicature in Parliament may be maintained The Commons readily acknowledg that the Crimes charged upon the Earl of Powis Viscount Stafford Lord Petre Lord Arundel of Warder and Lord Bellasis are of deep Guilt and call for speedy Justice But withall they hold That any change in Judicature in Parliament made without consent in full Parliament to be of pernicious Consequence both to his Majesty and his Subjects and conceive themselves obliged to transmit to their Posterity all the Rights which of this kind they have received from their Ancestors by putting your Lordships in mind of the progress that hath already been between the two Houses in relation to the Propositions made by the Commons and the Reasonableness of the Propositions themselves They doubt not but to make it appear that their aim has been no other than to avoid such Consequences and preserve that Right and that there is no delay of Justice on their part And to that end do offer to your Lordships the ensuing Reasons and Narrative That the Commons in bringing the Earl of Danby to Justice and in discovery of that Execrable and Traiterous Conspiracy of which the Five Popish Lords now stand Impeached and for which some of their wicked Accomplices have already undergone the Sentence of the Law as Traytors and Murtherers have laboured under many great Difficulties is not unknown to your Lordships Nor is it less known to your Lordships That upon the Impeachment of the House of Commons against the Earl of Danby for High Treason and other High Crimes Misdemenours and Offences even the Common Justice of Sequestring him from Parliament and forthwith Committing him to safe Custody was then required by the Commons and denied by the House of Peers though he then Sate in their House Of which your Lordships have been so sensible that at a free Conference the Tenth of April last your Lordships declared That it was the Right of the Commons and well Warranted by Precedents of former Ages That upon an Impeachment of the Commons a Peer so Impeached ought of Right to be Ordered to with-draw and then to be committed And had not that Justice been denied to the Commons great part of this Session of Parliament which hath been spent in framing and adjusting a Bill for causing the Earl of Danby to appear and Answer that Justice from which he was fled had been saved and had been imployed for the Preservation of his Majesties Person and the security of the Nation and in Prosecution of the other Five Lords Neither had he had the Opportunity for procuring for himself that illegal Pardon which bears date the First of March last past and which he hath now pleaded in Bar of his Impeachment Nor of wasting so great a proportion of the Treasure of the Kingdom as he hath done since the Commons exhibited their Articles of Impeachment against him After which time thus lost by reason of the denyal of that Justice which of Right belonged to the Commons upon their Impeachment the said Bill being ready for the Royal Assent the said Earl then rendred himself and by your Lordships Order of the Sixteenth of April last was Committed to the Tower After which he pleads the said Pardon and being prest did at length declare He would relie upon and abide by that Plea which Pardon pleaded being illegal and void and so ought not to Bar or Preclude the Commons from having Justice upon the Impeachment They did thereupon with their Speaker on the Fifth of May instant in the name of themselves and all the Commons of England Demand Judgment against the said Earl upon their Impeachment Not doubting but that your Lordships did intend in all your Proceedings upon the Impeachment to follow the usual Course and Method of Parliament But the Commons were not a little surprized by the Message from your Lordships delivered them on the Seventh of May thereby acquainting them That as well the Lords Spiritual as Temporal had Ordered that the Tenth of May instant should be the day for hearing the Earl of Danby to make good his Plea of Pardon And that on the Thirteenth of May the other Five Lords Impeached should be brought to their Tryal And that your Lordships had Addressed to his Majesty for naming a Lord High Steward as well in the Case of the Earl of Danby as the other Five Lords Upon consideration of this Message the Commons found that the admitting the Lords Spiritual to exercise Jurisdiction in these Cases was an alteration of the Judicature in Parliament and which extended as well to the Proceeding against the other Five Lords as the Earl of Danby And if a Lord High-Steward should be necessary upon Tryal on Impeachments of the Commons the Power of Judicature in Parliament upon Impeachments might be Defeated by suspending or denying a Commission to constitute a Lord High-Steward And that the
signe the Resolve for the King's Death 5. That as for Gavan alias Gawen though he could not positively say he saw him at the Consult yet he saw his hand subscribed to it and makes it out how he knows it to be his hand And that he in July 78. gave P. 15. them in London an account how prosperous their affairs were in Staffordshire and Shropshire that the Lord Stafford was very diligent and that there was two or three Thousand Pound ready there to carry on the Designe And that some time in July homet the said Gawen at Ireland's Chamber where in his presence he gave Father Ireland the same account as before he had written The next Witness was Mr. Dugdale that never gave Evidence before at any of their Tryals who had no knowledge of either Mr. Oates or Mr. 〈◊〉 when he first came in and so could not conspire with them to charge the very same persons as they had done He swears 1. Against Whitebread That he saw a Letter under his hand and tells you how he knew it to be his to Father Ewers a Jesuit and the said Mr. Dugdale's Confessor in which he ordered him to be sure to chuse men that were hardy and trusty no matter whether they were Gentlemen p. 22. and p. 29. he swears it again and what they were to do that the words under his hand were in express terms For Killing the King 2. Against Gawen he swears directly that he entertain'd him the said Mr. Dugdale to be of the Conspiracy to Murther the King as one of those resolute Fellows prescribed by Whitebread and that they had several Consultations in the Countrey at several places which he names for Murdering of the King and bringing in Popery as at Boscobel and at Tixal in Sept. 1678. And that he heard them discourse at one of these Consults that it was the opinion of the Monks at Paris who were concern'd in the Conspiracy and were to assist That assoon as the Deed was done that is the Killing of the King they should lay it on the Presbyterians thereby to provoke the other Protestants to cut their P. 25. Throats and then they might the more easily cut theirs And p. 26. That he hath intercepted and read for all their Letters in those Parts came under his Cover above 100 Letters to the same purpose all tending to the Introducing of Popery and Killing the King which being without any Names only directed to Mr. Dugdale and to be delivered by marks known to Father Ewers if they had been intercepted by the way only Dugdale could have been called in question for it 3. That himself was so zealous in the Cause that he had given them 400 l. for carrying on this Design which Gavan had made him believe was not only lawful but meritorious and that he was to be sent up to London by Harcourt there to be instructed for Killing the P. 23. King 4. That the same Harcourt whose hand the Witness well knows did write word of Sir Edmundbury Godfrey's being Murthered that very Night it was done to Father Ewers so that they knew of it in Staffordshire several days before any except those privy to the Murder at London knew what was become of him And to confirm his Testimony herein he produceth Mr. Chetwin a Person of Quality who swears That he did hear it then reported as from Dugdale and that he was not in Town when the Murderers of Sir Edmundbury Godfrey were Tryed or else he would then have witnessed the same 5. Against Turner he positively swears That he saw him with others at Ewers's Chamber where they consulted together to carry on this Design and that he agreed to the Plot that is bringing in of Popery by Killing the King Then Mr. Prance gave Evidence 1. Against Harcourt That such a day when he paid him for an Image of the P. 30. Virgin Mary to send into Maryland he told the Witness that there was a Design of Killing the King 2. Against Fenwick That he told him in Ireland's Chamber Ireland and Grove being by that there should be 50000 Men P. 31. in Arms in a readiness to settle their Religion and that they should be commanded by the Lords Beliasts Powis and Arundel Lastly Mr. Bedloe was sworn who first gives a satisfactory account why he did not before give in his Evidence against Whitebread and Fenwick because he was then finding out the Bribery and Subornation of Reading in behalf of the Lords in the Tower but now he positively swears 1. That he hath seen both Whitebread and Fenwick at several Consults about this Plot and that he heard Whitebread at Harcourt's Chamber tell Coleman the manner of the sending the four Russians to Windsor to kill the King 2. That he saw Harcourt take out of a Cabinet about 80 or 100 l. and give it to a Messenger to be carried to the said Russians P. 32. with a Guiney to drink Mr. Coleman's health 3. That Whitebread told him That Pickering was to have a great number of Masses and Grove 1500 l. for killing the King P. 33. 4. That Harcourt employed him several times to carry their Consults beyond the Seas and that he received in Harcourt's presence Mr. Coleman's thanks for his Fidelity and P. 35. that Harcourt recommended him to the Lord Arundel who promised him great favour when the times were turned Also that he saw Harcourt give Wakeman a Bill to receive 2000 l. in part of a greater sum and heard Sir George say 15000 l. was a small Reward for the settling Religion and preserving three Kingdomes from Ruine Thus we see there is the positive Testimony of three viz. Dr. Oates Mr. Dugdale and Mr. Bedloe against Whitebread Of three quite blank against Fenwick viz. Oates Bedloe and Prance And against Harcourt four very fully Oates Dugdale Bedloe and Prance Against Gavan there is positively Dugdale's and Oates's and the same directly against Turner Whereby the matter of Fact is plainly proved and the Evidence full and legal against them all There was also the before-mentioned Letter read found amongst Harcourt's Papers which did much fortifie the Evidence as to the certainty and nature of the Consult of the 24th of April It was written from one Petre a Jesuit to another of their Society to let him know there was to be a Consult on the said 24th of April in which were these words Every one is minded also not to hasten to London long before the time appointed nor to appear much about the Town till the meeting be over lest occasion should be given to suspect the Design Finally Secrecy as to the Time and Place is much recommended to all those that receive Summons as it will appear of its own nature necessary Now as to what the Prisoners had to say against all this it was well observed by the Lord Chief-Justice p. 89. That they defend their Lives as they do their Religion with
the Bar not the least passion or alteration appeared in them at the Invectives of the Judge or at the Clamours of the People but made a clear and candid defence with a chearful and unconcerned countenance and as 13 13 Dear Sir tell us his name he was a Wit undoubtedly unless it were your self A Jury of Turks have done strange things and may acquit any body but these were a Jury of honest Christians and therefore they found them guilty a Stander-by said if they had had a Jury of Turks they had been quitted I was with them both before and after their Tryal and had the honour of being in my Function 14 14 't is pity you had not been caught giving the Knaves that Absolution serviceable to them which I look upon as that God favoured me in I hope for my future good Next day Mr. Langhorne a Lawyer Sir George Wakeman Mr. Corker Mr. March Mr. Rumbly the three last Benedictines were brought to the Bar where the Indictment being read against them for conspiring the Kings death c. they pleaded all Not guilty Then was Langhorne first tryed whose Tryal held so long that they had not time to try the other four and the Commission by which they sat expiring that day the Judge adjourned the Tryal of the other four till the 14th of July and then the Judge commanded the Keeper to bring the five Jesuits whom with Langhorne 15 15 Poor Langhorne not one word of praise for thee methoughts thou lookedst as Apostolically as the best of them but this 't is to be a Lay-man and confess Jesuits Lands were sentenced to be hang'd drawn and quartered Mr. Corker and Mr. March are close Prisoners and have been so this eight months with whom I have been God has fitted and is still fitting them as Sacrifices for himself They are very well disposed and resigned to Gods holy will Mr. Rumbly hath the liberty of the Prison with whom is Mr. Heskett all chearful and expect the good hour On Thursday the day before the five Jesuits were executed my Lord Shaftsbury was with Turner and Gaven promising them the Kings Pardon if they would acknowledge the Conspiracy Mr. Gaven answered He would not murther his Soul to save his Body for he must acknowledge what he knew not and what he did believe was not On Friday the 20th of June Mr. Whitebread on one Sled with Mr. Harcourt Mr. Turner and Mr. Gaven upon another Sled and Mr. Fenwick in a Sled by himself were drawn from Newgate to Tyburn Mr. Langhorne is for a time reprieved and promised Pardon if he will as 't is reported discover the Estates of the Jesuits he was their Lawyer 'T is certain my Lord Shaftsbury has been often with him In the way they comported themselves seriously and chearfully Mr. Gaven had smug'd himself up as if he had been going to a Wedding When they arrived at Tyburn they each made a Speech 1. Assevering their ignorance of any Plot against his Majesty 2. Pardoning their Accusers 3. And heartily praying for them Mr. Gaven in his Speech made an Act of Contrition 16 16 Perhaps that whisking Lye That never any Jesuites have allow'd of King-killing which was much liked by all for he was an excellent Preacher Then they all betook themselves to Meditation for more than a good quarter The Multitude was great and yet there was a profound silence and their most Religious Comportment has wonderfully allayed the fury of the People When they had ended their Prayer and the Ropes were about their necks there came a Horse-man in full speed from Whitehal and cried as be rode 17 17 You may measure the truth of the rest by this most groundless and notorious Lye coyn'd to amuse the people beyond the Seas there being no such Pardon nor any thing in the world like it that might occasion such a Fable so that it must needs be purposely invented to deceive A Pardon a Pardon so with much difficulty he made through the press to the Sheriff who was under the Gallows to see Execution performed Then was the Pardon read which expressed how the King most graciously and out of his great inclination to Clemency granted them their lives which by Treason they had forfeited upon condition they would acknowledge the Conspiracy and lay open what they knew thereof but they all thanked his Majesty for his inclination of Mercy towards them but as to any Conspiracy they knew of none much less were guilty of any so they could not accept of any Pardon upon those Conditions After a little recollection the Cart was driven away After they were dead they were quarter'd but their Quarters were given to their Friends 18 18 Non poena sed Causa facit Martyrem Did any one of these die for Religion or any thing relating thereunto Or is Treason and killing of Kings part of your Religion Sanguis Martyrum sit semen Ecclesiae I sent to you an account of Mr. Pickering's death and will tell you what may happen but I know not if they come to you You may cover your Letter to me for Mrs. Ploydon at my Lady Drummonds in Queen-street London Superscribed A Madame Madame Catherine Hall à Cambray aux Refuge de Isemy Cambray This Letter was found upon a Table under the Carpet on which was a parcel of Money laid when the Justice came into the Room and though Mr. Carul was pleas'd to deny it to be his hand-writing yet the Steel-dust wherewith it was dried appeared by comparison to be the very same with that which was in his Dust-box And when they came to search him in his Pocket-book amongst other things there were upon one of the leaves these words written 9ber the 9th The Figure of the day in the Original is somewhat blotted but supposed to be a 9 but 9ber for the month of November is very plain Vpon my Salvation and as I hope to see the face of God I know no more of any Plot or Conspiracy of which I am accused directly or indirectly than the Child that is new-born Tho. Whitebread This will be proved to be the hand-writing of Father Whitebread the Jesuits Provincial lately executed and there is good reason to believe that this was the very form whereby he generally directed and allowed all Jesuits to deny the Plot and which when they had his command to do it could not be according to their Doctrine any sin for he being their Superiour is to be obeyed without scruple in all things nor can there be any other reasonable construction made thereof There were several other notable Circumstances attending the Apprehension of this person which may possibly in time give further light to the Plot. In the mean time the said Caryl is kept close in the Marshalsea CHAP. XXI The Proceedings against Sir George Wakeman Baronet William Marshal James Corker and William Rumley SIR George Wakeman Her
of the most material passages such as will be necessary for compleating this our Compendious History and giving the Reader a general Scheme of the horrid Contrivance referring the more curious to those Relations at large 1. The sum of the Intrigue was That seeing their former Popish Plot against His Majesties Person and Government and the Protestant Religion was notoriously detected and all their attempts to baffle or stifle the Kings Evidence frustrated they resolved upon coyning a new pretended Plot which should be charged on the Presbyterians by name but in truth involve the most zealous and active Protestant Nobility Gentry c. throughout the Nation which being fortified with bold Perjuries and specious pretences might gain credit and thereby they being destroyed as a sacrifice to Justice it might seem probable that the last years Plot was onely their malicious contrivance against the Catholicks who would then appear the Kings best Subjects and having so crusht their Enemies might with safety and almost without opposition proceed in their former Plot to subvert the Government c. See Col. Mans Narrative fol. 2. 2. Amongst other Instruments for this purpose they made choice of this Mr. Dangerfield as one professing the Roman Catholick Religion and whose extravagant courses and desperate condition being a Prisoner in Newgate had rendered him fit to serve them therein 3. To him Mistress Celier Wife of a French Merchant a great crony of the Lady Powis and at whose House the before-mentioned Witnesses from St. Omers had been harboured repairs and after some petty Tryals of his parts procured his Liberty and paid his Fees But being clapt up immediately after for Debt removed him into the Kings-Bench and there for a considerable time allowed him Twenty shillings a week Mr. Dang Narrative fol. 2 3. 4. There he was employed to Trepan one Stroud and get something out of him against Mr. Bedloe And to that purpose was to drink him hard and allowed by two Priests to be drunk on the same day he had received the Sacrament since it was for the good of the Cause He also gave Stroud Opium to lay him to sleep by advice of Mrs. Celier the Priests Nevil c. but without any great advantage Idem fol. 5. And now Mrs. Celier sends for the time of his Nativity which he sent her 5. Having compounded his Debts which amounted to near seven hundred pound Mrs. Celier furnisht him with money to discharge them so he left the Kings Bench is brought acquainted with the Lady Powis who promises to make him a Fortune and takes a Lodging for him in Drury-lane employs him to get Priests out of Prison sends him to the Lord Castlemain who likes him well c. fol. 7 8. 6. He is sent with a Pacquet to one Mrs. Jean at Peterley in Buckinghamshire whom he finds indeed to be a Priest and from him brings up Papers to the Lady Powis being the ground-work of the New-Plot That Pamphlets must be writ and persons employed at Coffee-houses to rail against the Presbyterians c. p. 10. 7. He is employed to Tutor the St. Omer-youths under the Lord Castlemain who was their grand Instructor He takes Notes at the Five Jesuits Tryals carries them to the Lords in the Tower who encourage him to write Pamphlets and promise to reward him and thenceforth he was allowed three pound a week besides Diet fol. 12. 8. Castlemain employs him to get Knox and Lane out of the Gate-house who were to swear against Oates and having obtained Lane's liberty he was kept privately at Powis-house Here they contrive to Iudict Mr. Oates first of Perjury and then of Buggery 9. The Lords order him to go to Coffee-houses particularly Farrs Mans Garraways Jonathans c. and disperse Pamphlets as the Reflections on the Earl of Danby written by Nevil c. This is that Nevil whom we mentioned before in this History for his Poetical Prayer to the Ghost of St. Coleman At Wakemans Tryal Dangerfield takes Notes and received from Nevil divers Papers and Letters to transcribe amongst which were forty Lists of Names each containing above 800 Names These were privately to be left by their Agents throughout England in the Houses of Nonformists or other Protestants and then search being made on other pretences when these dangerous Papers were found the persons mentioned would be seized for Treason Another time he Transcribed twenty seven such Letters and sent them to the Tower And one Mr. Holder his R. H. Auditor at Brussels was ordered to get divers Coats of Arms cut there on Seals the Impressions having been taken off the Wax of Gentlemens Letters which was to make the Treasonable forged Letters more authentick 10. About the beginning of August lodging at Mrs. Celiers house he is sent for to the Tower where the Lord Arundel in the presence of the Lord Powis after other discourses askt him if for a good reward he would venture to kill the King mentioning 2000 l. But Dangerfield blushing at such a horrid motion Powis put it off and then proposed 500 l. if he would kill the Lord Shaftesbury which he promised to undertake whereupon they told him of one Rigaut a Virginia-Merchant that should advise with him about it and secure the 500 l. And the next day waiting on the Lord Castlemain who was then writing the Compendium he appeared much enraged saying Why were you so unwilling to do what you were taken out of Prison for Whereupon Dangerfield made hast away but Celier excused my Lords passion to him And Sharp a Priest after Confession and the Sacrament justified to him That he might kill his King if he were first Excommunicated and Condemned by the Church fol. 23. 11. That the Countess of Powis ordered him to acquaint the Lord Peterborough that Sir Robert Peyton would meet him at Gadburies the Astrologers house which he did and also Gadbury who then seemed very angry and gave the reason because the said Dangerfield refused to kill the King adding that he had Calculated his Nativity and found him a person fit for that Enterprize and that he might come off with safety fol. 25 26. In pursuance of this Assignation the the L. P. and Sir R. P. met and as the Lady Powis told Dangerfield agreed well and Sir R. declared he would come into the Kings Service to all purposes and afterwards met the Duke once or twice and engaged to employ all his Interest for his Highnesses service 12. That the Countess of Powis dictated to him Remarks of four Clubs in the Town and the Names of several persons which Paper was afterwards found in the Meal-tub of which we shall by and by give a farther account And by the means of the Lord Peterborough he was introduced to the Duke of York and acquainted him with this Presbyterian Plot who afterwards giving him Twenty Guineys with his own hand brought him to the King having received Instructions what to say from the Lady Powis as to charging the
Respondents part and not the Opponents It 's not so easie to prove as to wrangle against proofs 2. Follow them with certain Questions which the vulgar are not verst in As 1. Where was your Church before Luther or where hath it been visible in all Ages 2. How prove you that you have a true Scripture that is the Word of God among you 3. What express Word of God do the Catholicks contradict 4. How prove you that you have a truely called Ministry that is to be heard and believed by the people 5. By what Warrant did you separate from the Catholick Church and condemn all your Forefathers and all the Christian World 6. If you will separate from the Catholick Church what reason have you to follow this Sect rather than any one of all the rest 7. What one man can you name from the beginning that was in all things of Luthers or Calvins opinions 8. Do you not see that God doth not bless the labours of your Ministers but the people are as bad as they were before what the better are you for hearing them Our hearty Prayers are for your Success And Sir I am yours to command F. B. These were part of the subtle and more innocent Platforms laid by the Jesuites to undermine the Protestant Religion and introduce Popery which were discovered and set forth in Print now almost twenty years ago yet have they still ever since vigorously traced the same methods with mischievous success and without any great opposition till finding all these not enough to accomplish their main work they applied themselves to more bloody and violent Counsels and the hatching of that Master-piece of villany the horrid Plot whereof we have in the precedent sheets given you a summary account which being so far detected nothing but Gods Judgments on these sinful Nations in suffering the spirit of infatuation to possess us can hinder its being prevented The following Transactions happening after the Printing this History be pleased to take a summary account thereof as follows THe 10th of December 1679. was published a Proclamation signifying the Kings pleasure that the Parliament formerly Prorogued to the 26th of January should at that time be Prorogued again to the 11th of November 1680. About this time several persons Endeavouring to promote Petitions and Nine Lords in the names of several other Peers of the Realm actually presenting a Petition to his Majesty for the Parliament to continue to sit on the said 26th of January his Majesty thought fit to publish his Proclamation for the preventing of tumultuous Petitions yet many conceiving such humble Petitioning not to be forbidden by any Law of this Kingdome did proceed therein and on the 20th of December three persons of the Parish of St. Martins in the Fields sending for some others that were promoting such a Petition and having it produced did tear the same for which being carried before a Justice of the Peace since discharged of the Commission they were bound over and the next Sessions a Bill being preferred against them reciting That whereas the subjects and liege people of England by the Laws and Customes thereof have used to represent their grievances by Petition or by any other way And whereas such a Petition reciting the words was prepared and subscribed by many of the Kings Subjects and liege People the Persons indicted being ill-affected and contriving devising and intending as much as in them lay to hinder the sitting of the said Parliament as was prayed in the Petition and also to hinder the Tryal of the Offenders and redress the Grievances therein mentioned did as Rioters and disturbers of the Peace c. with Force and Arms c. unlawfully riotously and injuriously the said Petition being delivered to them at their request and for the subscribing of their Names thereto if they should think fit did tear in pieces in Contempt of our Soveraign Lord the King and of his Laws to the evil Example c. and against the Peace c. Which Bill was found by the Grand Jury And on the 13th of January a Petition was presented to his Majesty by Sir Gilbert Gerrard Baronet Son in the Law to the late Bishop of Durham Thomas Smith Bencher of the Inner-Tempel and eight other Gentleman and Citizens of considerable Estates and Qualities the words whereof were as follows To the King 's most Excellent Majesty the humble Petition of your Majesties most Dutiful and Loyal Subjects Inhabitants in and about the City of London whose Names are hereunder subscribed Sheweth THat whereas there has been and still is a most Damnable and Hellish Plot branched forth into the most horrid Villanies against Your Majesties most Sacred Person the Protestant Religion and the well-established Government of this your Realm for which several of the principal Conspirators stand now Impeach'd by Parliament Therefore in such a time when Your Majesties Royal Person as also the Protestant Religion and the Government of this Nation are thus in most eminent danger Your Majesties most Dutiful and Obedient Subjects in the deepest sense of our Duty and Allegiance to your Majesty do most humbly and earnestly pray That the Parliament which is Prorogued until the 26th day of January may then Sit to try the Offenders and to Redress all our Grievances no otherwise to be redressed And your Petitioners shall ever pray for Your Majesties long and prosperous Reign To this Petition was annexed a Roll of above 100 Yards long containing many thousand Names of many of the most eminent Citizens and Inhabitants in and about London that had subscribed the same His Majesties Answer was to this effect I know the substance of it already and as I am Head of the Government I shall take care of it The Papists though so often bastled resolve still to play a new Game and therefore on the 7th of January John Gadbury Prisoner for the Popish High-Treason as we have before related sent to acquaint the Lords appointed a Committee for Examination that he had something to communicate to them whereupon he was immediately sent for but being perhaps not sufficiently tutor'd he then excused himself that he did not expect to be so suddenly called and therefore desired further time whereupon he was ordered to put what he had to say into writing And on the 9th of January being again examined before His Majesty did declare That about September last Sir Robert Peyton desiring to be reconciled to the Interests of his Majesty and the Duke of York Gadbury acquainted Mrs. Celier the Midwife therewith between whom and Sir Robert there grew an intimate Correspondence and that Sir R. Peyton did then say he should hereby lose a considerable Interest which could put him in the Head of 20000 men in two days time and that could raise 60000 men in little more than a Week And that these people in case the King had died the last Summer at Windsor would have seized the Tower Dover-Castle c. secured the
Mayor of London and opposed all that should have proclaimed the Duke of York Mrs. Celier though both pretended to be kept close Prisoners he in the Gatehouse and she in Newgate yet being now brought up confirmed in substance the same Story only adding that they were to murder the Lord Mayor destroy all Episcopists set up a Commonwealth and to that purpose allowed Pensions to several old Officers of the late Rebellious Army All these things and words Sir R. Peyton absolutely denied yet was by Warrant from the Council committed to the Tower for High-Treason for Conspiring to raise Arms against the King a close Prisoner though the Five Popish Lords directly charged upon Oath and Impeach'd by Parliament for a Designe to Murder the King and Subvert the Government were admitted mutual Converse and free access of Visitants yet no body without special Warrant being admitted to visit him In the mean time both Gadbury Celier were flusht with hopes of procuring their respective Pardons but that being stopt upon divers weighty Considerations by a most judicious and Honorable Peer Gadbury began to relent and on the 14th discovered the whole contrivance of this Sham-Plot that he knew no harm by Sir Robert but was drawn in by Mrs. Celier c. to testifie such things against him c. whereupon there was an Order that Celier should be kept close Prisoner and 't is supposed Gadbury will at last make a full honest Discovery On Saturday the 17th of January at the Sessions in the Old-Bayly were Arraigned eight persons as Popish Priests viz. David Joseph Kemish Lionel Anderson alias Mounson William Russel alias Napper James Corker and William Marshal Two Benedictine Monks formerly tryed for the Plot with Wakeman George Parris alias Parry Henry Starkey and Alexander Lumsdel Of whom the first that is Mr. Kemish being very antient and sickly was upon his humble request after Arraignment referred to another time for Tryal when he might be better able to make his defence The other seven being severally tryed the chief Witnesses that gave Evidence against them were Dr. Oates Mr. Bedloe Mr. Prance Mr. Dugdale and Mr. Dangerfield The particulars of their respective Charge and Defence are too tedious here to be set forth the sum was that they were severally proved by the Witnesses some speaking as to some of the Prisoners others to others to have said Mass consecrated and administred the Eucharist and frequently performed such Functions as no Lay-man in their Church is allowed to meddle with Particularly it was proved by Mr. Dangerfield that Anderson alias Mounson having scowr'd his Kettle that is took his Confession and given him Absolution and ordered him to receive the Sacrament which he did accordingly did yet the same day perswade him to endeavour to get some secrets out of Stroud then a Prisoner with them in the Kings-bench against Mr. Bedloe and to do it by drinking hard with Stroud and the Witness seeming to be a little scrupulous of being drunk the same day he had Received this holy Father said he might venture without danger it was no harm if he were drunk since he did it for the good of the Cause The Defences made by them were either silly or else rather subtle than solid alleadging that there was no way to convict them of being Priests unless the Witnesses saw them actually take Orders Which if true the Statute would be vain and its whole force eluded None of them had either so much zeal as now to own himself a Priest though one of them had confest it before to the Court which he now denied but rather all seeming to deny it lying at catch with the Witnesses words and urging them to name the very days they heard them say Mass that they might by their Gang prepared to affirm any thing contradict them Which appear'd evidently in that Marshal was not ashamed openly to declare That let Mr. Oates name any time or place whatsoever he would bring Witnesses to disprove him This Marshal was their great Orator who made long Speeches but to very little purpose there being nothing of weight or matter in what he urged Starkey was an Old man that said he had been a Major in the late King's Army and 't was proved that he had boasted that he had said Mass twenty and twenty times in that Army and of late the Witnesses had divers times and at several places heard him say Mass c. After a full and fair Tryal the Jury brought in Six Guilty who thereupon received Sentence of Death But Lumsdel being a Scotchman was left upon a special Verdict it being doubted whether he were within the Statute of the 27 Eliz. cap. 2. on which they were Indicted So that he must lye till the Judges have determined that Point FINIS